If you have a
great tagline, you should include that on your artwork. If you produce a lot of
videos (a new video every week, or every other day, for example), then include
that in your channel banner so that people know what to expect.
Remember that
YouTube can be viewed on many devices, from a smart phone to a television. On a
larger television screen, the channel art will appear in the background, behind
your content. On a desktop or mobile device, the channel artwork appears as a
banner across the top of the content.
Important Note: As you design your channel artwork, keep in
mind that “safe area” in the center of the template. That’s the area that will
be displayed on nearly every device. You want to keep your text and graphics
within that area.
Make sure any
important information like your website URL, taglines, and images are inside of
this space so they’ll show up on the device and not be cut off or covered up.
Another thing
to think about is your linking text. YouTube lets you display links to your
channel – they show up in the bottom right corner, on top of your channel
artwork. Make sure you don’t have text, logos, or important images in that area
of your artwork.
Step 4: Creating Share worthy Content
The post production process is very important as well, especially when it comes to creating engaging content free of lag and poor pacing.
The main
thing to pay attention to during the editing process is to remove any unnecessary
pauses, lags and to ensure that you keep a steady pace so that your content
flows smoothly and keeps your viewers’ attention.
YouTube isn’t a difficult platform to learn. In fact, its popularity is mostly due to how easy it is to use. You can upload videos in a range of formats and YouTube converts them into Adobe Flash for you (this gives you a file extension of .FLV).
Doing this allows YouTube to play your videos on its flash player (which anyone can upload for free and use).
Another great benefit of this is that you can embed your video into a website just by copying the HTML code and pasting it into your site. This lets any of your website visitors watch the video on your site using the YouTube player.
This way, you don’t have to host the videos on your own site and use up a ton of bandwidth.
Bandwidth is the range of signal frequencies you need to transmit data over the internet – and you have to pay for what you use. Let YouTube carry the bandwidth burden for you!
Metadata is the title, description, thumbnail, and tags you give your video when you upload it. That means you need to make sure your tags are relevant to the video content (and that they match the keywords viewers would use to search for your content).
YouTube also measures video quality by measuring the length of time it’s being watched. If a lot of viewers leave the channel before your video is over, this suggests that your video had a misleading title (or thumbnail), or that it didn’t give viewers what they were looking for.
If they stay
until the end, your video is likely appropriate for the search terms used, and
it will be given a higher ranking than videos left unfinished.
·
Do they create head-talker type video content more often than other
formats?
The important
thing is to stay consistent, follow a content schedule that your subscribers
come to rely on and stay true to your brand.