77,993 views
Every day I receive dozens of requests for help in the comments under my videos, via email, via message, etc. I can't help everyone for free, also because otherwise I would have to do this all day practically, but every now and then when I have a few minutes I go and browse the channel of the person in question who wrote to me. Most of the time I notice that very few videos have been uploaded. Often under 10. And here I understand the problem. It's not a question of bad optimization, it's not a question of strategy or even of the quality of the content. It's a question of mentality. Let me explain better. Youtube is a different platform from the others. On Facebook for example, in addition to videos we can post photos and text. On Instagram we only post photos. On Youtube only videos. You know better than me how much effort is necessary to make a well-made video. Between planning, filming, editing and optimization after uploading it is not at all strange that a whole day can go by. So we tend to assume that greater effort must necessarily correspond to a significantly superior result. When this doesn't happen, then you feel frustrated. It's understandable, but it's not the right mentality. On YouTube, it's a little harder to grow at the beginning, there's no doubt about that. But we all started from scratch. We all had to climb a slope, more or less steep. However, the advantage of YouTube compared to other platforms is that if we continue to work consistently over time, what I like to call the snowball effect happens. Like in cartoons when the snowball goes down the hill and gets bigger and bigger until it overwhelms the unfortunate person on duty who is unfortunate enough to find himself at the bottom of the valley, so our channel, if we work well, can grow over time, drastically increasing the results. Something that doesn't happen on other platforms, where if we stop publishing we practically disappear and it seems like we've never existed. So the next time you feel frustrated, consider that under 20 videos published with criteria (therefore following the advice I've given on this channel in recent years) it can't even be considered started. Only after that can we try to understand if the results are more or less satisfactory and we can establish a strategy. My advice is to put this concept into your head and embrace this mentality. If you do, you will be above 99% of people who start a channel and give up after a few published videos. Then you will achieve your success, which obviously must be defined according to your parameters. #increaseviews #increaseviews #Youtubemarketing == ...