
TubeTalk: Your YouTube How-To Guide
TubeTalk tackles the questions that real YouTubers are asking. Each week we discuss how to make money on YouTube, how to get your videos discovered, how to level up your gaming channel, or even how the latest YouTube update is going to impact you and your channel. If you've ever asked yourself, "How do I grow on YouTube?" or "Where can I learn how to turn my channel into a business?" you've come to the right podcast! TubeTalk is a vidIQ production. To learn more about how we help YouTube creators big and small, visit https://vidIQ.com
TubeTalk: Your YouTube How-To Guide
The Delusion of YouTube Success
Get the vidIQ plugin for FREE: https://vidiq.ink/boostplugin
Want a 1 on 1 coach? https://vidiq.ink/theboost1on1
Join our Discord! https://www.vidiq.com/discord
Watch the YouTube version: https://www.youtube.com/@vidIQPodcasts
Our coaches explore the psychology of YouTube success, discussing whether determination alone is enough or if creators need a healthy dose of "delusion" to keep going when views are low.
• Understanding Total Addressable Market (TAM) and how it affects your potential audience size
• Why pivoting from local content to broader topics often leads to significant view increases
• How to approach sponsorships even with a small channel by leveraging your content creation skills
• The psychology of early YouTube creation and talking to a camera when nobody's watching
• Successful creators often "act as if" they already have a large audience, holding themselves to higher standards
• Why simply persisting without strategic improvement won't guarantee YouTube success
• Using audience retention data from previous videos to optimize new content
Remember to download vidIQ for free at vidIQ.com to help you analyze your audience and optimize your content strategy.
Welcome to Tube Talk, the show dedicated to helping you become a better video creator so you can get more views, subscribers and build your audience. Brought to you by vidIQ. Download for free at vidIQcom.
Speaker 2:Hey, welcome back to the only podcast that loves you at least six times more than you love us. I'm Travis, and I'm here with an incredibly special guest, one of my favorite of all time, tina Woo-hoo, woo-hoo us, I'm Travis and I'm here with an incredibly special guest One of my favorite of all time, tina. Yes.
Speaker 3:Tina's from our coaching team here at vidIQ and she's going to help me out with a couple episodes. Yes, yeah.
Speaker 2:Are you excited? I'm pumped, she's super pumped. I love that Today we're going to talk about our YouTubers delusional, probably some of them are. Can anyone make it on YouTube, and are there different styles of content that just disappear and go away, kind of like just disappear? That's the thing. But we do that by getting messages from you.
Speaker 2:If you would like to send us a message, if you love us that much and you just want to talk to us, leave us a comment on one of the YouTube videos. I mean, that's a really easy way to do it, but you can send us an email at theboostvidiqcom. Or if you're listening to the audio only podcast, there is a little logo there at the bottom that says text us. You click on that and send us a text, which, by the way, you know I don't know if you know this, because I'm going to read one of the texts here in a minute A couple of months back talked about how I thought it was interesting that people can write really long texts, like we're going to see here. This is almost like an email, but someone texted it to us and I was flipped out by that. Does that freak you out at all? It seems like like why is that?
Speaker 3:I love it. I love texts that mimic emails. That's my favorite kind of text. Do you do that? Are you a long texter? I do when I have the permission to do so, because I do realize people do not like long text.
Speaker 2:Do you have to ask for permission for listen? I want to.
Speaker 3:Actually no, I do it first and then, if they get wild about it, then I'll cut it down or I'll do voice notes. Apparently, people prefer voice notes.
Speaker 2:I like a good voice note. I like a good voice note and I leave them because I don't like typing that much. But I just think it's weird to be typing that much on your phone, like that just seems weird. Is it?
Speaker 3:We have to communicate. How else are you going to communicate?
Speaker 2:I'm going to leave you a voice note. I don't know what's going on. All right, let's get to this first one from ben. That is a text. Uh, hey, travis jenner, other guests allow. I'm from england, so I've never heard of candy corn. It sounds pretty grim. By the way, it sucks, it's terrible. Uh, but please try double decker. I don't know what that is my favorite chocolate. A thing of real beauty. That sounds amazing. Do Do you like chocolate?
Speaker 3:I love chocolate. Yes.
Speaker 2:You're in the right place.
Speaker 3:Yes.
Speaker 2:My question is regarding pivoting my channel. I have a channel called Life of Lily and Coco. We've done videos of our dogs following our days out trying to review dog-friendly places, but the videos have not received good traction, getting about 30 to 100 views maximum. Jenna Crew did a live review of the channel and it got destroyed in the nice and rightly way possible. Time is also a factor in. Having regular days out with dogs is hard.
Speaker 2:I recently did a headshot style vlog video on five reasons to get a Springer Spaniel and in that style I got nearly 2000 views, loads of comments and engagement. I want to do more of this style, as my editing skills are, self-confessed, totally awful. Do you think headshot vlog style videos are here to stay? So I want to talk about this because there's a couple of things that they said that I think really made sense to me. So let's start off where they started off with Tina. They talked about that. They just had a video about different places they could take their dog dog friendly places, which is only going to be interest of people. That lives near you, right?
Speaker 3:Right If I'm out in your state what do I care Right.
Speaker 2:Then she did a vlog style video about reasons to get a Springer Spaniel, which now, all of a sudden, can talk to a lot of different people. What would you tell this creator if they came to you with this Say I want.
Speaker 3:Well, the thing is you're tapping into a bigger market, so naturally, not to say that, therefore, it always means you're going to have more views, but you have a potential for more views. And so, in terms of a pivot, I was afraid sometimes when you say pivot and your channels about something totally different let's say dogs and then now you want to do a food channel. That's different different.
Speaker 2:Let's say dogs, and then now you want to do a food channel. That's different. But there's something called TAM or total addressable market, which I think over the last year or so you've started to hear it more on YouTube for people who don't know what that means. That in a very simple way, means the amount of total people you can reach based off the topic and kind of videos you do. So, for example, when we talked about before, you were talking about dog places that had you know in your area that were dog friendly. The total adjustable market are the only people that live there and that have dogs. So it's very kind of minute doesn't mean matter what city you're in. At some point you're going to hit that cap.
Speaker 2:But talking about a specific breed of dog, as Sina said, really has a larger total addressable market, a lot more people that can actually be interested in that subject and then watch more of it. So whenever you're creating content, it's not bad to have a small total addressable market. Like, sometimes that's really good. If you're hyper-focused on something, you can make a lot of money potentially because you know, uh, manufacturers or companies or brands that are in your particular niche know that, hey, you have a super focused group of people that like your content and maybe they can activate with you a little bit more. Having said that, keep in mind that maybe you're only talking to 30, 40, 100 people and that's pretty much going to be it.
Speaker 2:When you're looking to grow on YouTube, you need to be looking at something that's larger than your niche. So what else? I think, if we look at this channel as like a dog channel and they were talking about a specific breed, I wonder if they could do like a bucket system. So they have their breed, but what would be like another bucket that would make sense for that dog? I would think something like dog toy reviews or something like that, or dog product reviews. Their own personality, I think, is what you're trying to say.
Speaker 3:I don dog toy reviews or something like that, or dog product reviews their own personality. I think I don't know about your dog, but uh, I don't know what your dog's into compared to other dogs, but we group specific, so small, yes.
Speaker 2:And then on the side of uh, like making money um, reviewing products and or services are pretty easy for affiliates, right, like you can make affiliate sales, especially if you're reviewing like dog treats or dog, you know, toys and you have an affiliate link for like Amazon or whatever. That's pretty easy money because people are going to look up reviews of things before they go and buy them. You know, I found I remember hearing something a long time ago, back when I forget, when I forget where I heard this, but it's like people will sacrifice more. I forget where I heard this, but it's like people will sacrifice more, will spend less on themselves, more than they will on their dogs and stuff.
Speaker 3:So I know this is the case.
Speaker 2:When I had my dog. My dog was living the life. I mean, whatever he wanted, he could have, Even if he didn't want it he got it, you know.
Speaker 3:Yes.
Speaker 2:So, yeah, I'm willing to not buy myself something and buy him something instead.
Speaker 3:Oh, Absolutely killing it.
Speaker 2:Really something instead oh absolutely killing it and that's really important because, ultimately, if you want to be making videos for life, you got to figure out a way to make money and you don't want to worry about AdSense, because that's such a such a fluctuating thing. That's not always the most exciting thing. All right. Next email oh, this is an email. It's the boost at vidIQcom. This one comes from Matthew Greetings, the vid I crew, from the upside down. Now, to be clear, I call Australia the upside down, just so you know. Okay, she didn't know that. All right, because they're upside down from us. What are you talking about? Oh, okay, you didn't know that.
Speaker 3:What. What does that mean?
Speaker 2:What does?
Speaker 3:that mean it is no one knows. You don't know this. They're upside down from us. You didn't know that they're upside down.
Speaker 2:Did you know that their toilets spin the opposite way of ours? Well, they're upside down from us because you know we're on one side of the globe, they're on the other.
Speaker 3:Right, okay, okay yeah.
Speaker 2:They're standing upside down from us right now. Okay, I love how like Tina, welcome to the podcast. Yeah, all right, I'm the person who wasn't Martha Stewart. Lol, trav. I'm not really sure what that means, but who wrote back in.
Speaker 1:November 2024.
Speaker 2:Talk about having lost a day's worth of recording. Oh, those are the worst.
Speaker 3:Yeah, those are the worst.
Speaker 2:I've had that. You have yeah.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's brutal. I now have 500 subs, 5,300 watch hours of content in the last year, three videos in the last 90 days and officially been added to the YPP. All right, let's do it. Yes, Congrats. I'm trying to work out what to do next. I love that YouTube never stops Like I did this thing I was trying to do. Now what's next? Well, the channel the Gaming, the gaming facility, is also the first channel to come up when I search for that term on YouTube. I designed a logo channel banner formulated branding for merch through a storefront. We're also looking at buying a better $400 microphone instead of my headset. Now, let me, let me stop. Let me stop reading the email here for a second. First of all, getting a good microphone is great. I don't think you need to go $400. Unless you're doing audio, very audio-specific content, where people are going to criticize you over it. I don't know if you need a $400 headphone or a microphone.
Speaker 2:Nice to have, Nice to have but don't feel like that's a necessity. I'm wondering how to progress in these areas, as I'm kind of winging it by the way, a lot of people winging it that's YouTube, whilst trying to navigate sponsorships. I have 100K views on my channel and a small but growing active community supporting me, but I can't get past the I'm not big enough to get sponsored. Thought process. That's interesting. Any thoughts or advice on anything I mentioned would be great. I think so.
Speaker 2:A couple of months ago, we had an incredible guest, justin Moore, talk about all of this as far as, like, getting sponsorship and stuff. I highly, highly, highly recommend you go back and watch that. But let's talk about the mindset here that this person is talking about. So they finally started getting some momentum. They're feeling good, they want to kind of grow things, but they also are having this. I'm still a small YouTuber. You know what's the next step. What would you say the next? What would you focus on as their coach if they came to you with like this situation?
Speaker 2:Yeah, and Justin talked a lot about the fact that these companies don't know how to do the things that we as YouTubers do. They don't know how to produce a video, edit a video shoot a video, upload a video. They just want to market their product or their service, right? If you can help them do that, then it's easy to approach them with a. Hey, I have, you know, a viewership that is in the age group that you're interested in, which, by the way, those metrics are available to you in your statistics, right In your analytics backend. And even, um, I think youtube still does the media kit thing, where it does an automatic media kit for you so you can send that along. It tells, um, you know, advertisers, what type of things your viewers are into as far as buying and selling stuff or buying stuff.
Speaker 2:And I feel like, if you have, if you take an opportunity to review a person's product or service that you want to be associated with and lead with that, and say, hey, look, you know, I reviewed one of your products. I really love your line, I really would love to work together with you. Is there something we can do? You'd be surprised at who will say yes, it brings up a great point. There are channels out there with a thousand subscribers that are literally getting money from companies to do things Because, again, those companies don't know how to do what we do and it's. It's so easy to forget how much, how many jobs a YouTuber does. They're a writer, they're a producer, they're a director, they're an editor. They're the talent, they're marketing, they're SEO, they're, they're seo, they're, they're all of these things in one and um.
Speaker 2:You'd be surprised how much individually those people would make nice good number, right yeah and um, the no thing is a really I'm glad you brought that up because definitely get used to and be okay with no's in your creation journey, even if it isn't about sponsorships, it could be collabs with another creator, it could be the big no from the algorithm Like this is not getting any views, like that's the worst. No, right, right, be any of those things, but that's the kind of the point. A lot of YouTube channels I would say most get 80% their views from 20 of their content. So you get a whole bunch of views from just a couple of your videos and most stuff you put out there perform okay, but not not the best, not going to kill, not going to crush it, not going to get you in front of things. But you'd be surprised at what that 20, the doors that that can open. I mean personally. It's opened up tons of sponsorship deals and being on TV and all the other things and it can totally do the same for you.
Speaker 3:I know, listen, I'm kind of big time, whoa, I'm big time I've been around the block.
Speaker 2:Yes, you have, apparently, I think, the funniest thing it did for me was I used to work at Amazon Corporate for seven years before I worked here at vidIQ and what I, I remember I left. They say you don't leave a job, you leave a manager, which?
Speaker 2:I agree with. I think that's a very true thing. And after I left I was like this I'm taking a big risk in doing this vidIQ job, like it's something that I can feel in my soul that I want to do, but I don't know if it's going to. It's going to work. Uh, within a year or so, right in two years, I got reached out to buy Amazon. Now I want to be clear Amazon's a big company.
Speaker 2:So the people that reached out to me had no idea that I had worked there and they wanted me to to test out what which was new at the time their influencer network thing where you can stream on Amazon. So I was one of the. I was in the first group of people that were ever invited to that. Wow, I'm like I'm gonna do that. Then, after doing it and kind of crushing it, they used, they asked to use me in their advertisements. So Amazon was putting me to advertise their product at a company that I used to work at. I used to be the cog. Now I'm not the cog, I was doing everything. I was on the front page of Amazon and it's times like that when you really believe in yourself that you can accomplish so much. It sounds so cliche, but if you really really have the passion, really really put some time into it, you can do some really amazing things Right, and you can be I do today. What are you talking about? I had doubts today.
Speaker 3:What are you talking about? No, but it's wonderful.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, I'm kind of special. All right, let's get to the next.
Speaker 3:Okay, Travis.
Speaker 2:All right, listen, you're going to shine me up. I'm going to shine myself up, all right. Okay, let's get to this next one. I think this is a really cool one because I feel like every once in a while, we get an email or something that makes me want to do a real hot take and I like giving brutal truths and I think we're going to get here. Let's do this first one. This is a text message. Hey, travis and Jen, I do not understand why anyone in their right mind could possibly eat candy corn. I agree with this. You're a psychopath if you eat candy corn and enjoy it, but Cadbury is one of God's greatest blessings to us as candy. You are right, whoever wrote this text message. You're a genius, absolute genius, app, absolute genius. Apologize if this would even be a debate. I totally agree with this and Tina agrees with me too, right you?
Speaker 2:absolutely you don't even know what's happening.
Speaker 3:I'm side on Jen's side.
Speaker 2:No, no, you don't want that. You don't want that, all right. Also, I've always had an idea in my mind that if you're really dedicated to becoming a YouTuber and work at it for years, you will always succeed eventually, as you never give up. I would think that's because practice makes perfect, and the longer you spend working on something, the better you get at it. Is this true or just false hope? Here's where I you know, I like encouraging creators, but more than that, I like the truth.
Speaker 2:Yes, I like facts, and the answer to this is no it is not true that just because you keep working at this that it will work. It will. You will succeed, because some of y'all are not good at this. No, I'm just kidding, I'm just playing. No, I'm just playing Everyone. The savage came out for a second what it is, so it's hard to explain Some of it.
Speaker 2:I will thoroughly say that sometimes YouTube algorithm doesn't help us. It's there to do its thing, but there's so many videos Over 500 hours are uploaded every minute actually substantially more. Now, that was an old statistic, so it's very possible that your thing just gets lost in the shuffle Totally possible. However, there are a lot of people that come to the platform to think this is just easy. They just watch a video and go I can do that and don't really learn anything else about the process of doing the thing, and it'll be things like thumbnails or titles or even the topic, or sometimes you just won't get to the point in the video.
Speaker 2:And just by doing more videos, doing more of the same, doesn't mean you're necessarily going to get better at it. I think people that listen to this podcast and use tools like vidIQ and actually pay attention to what they're doing and try to improve, those people have a much better chance of succeeding. But people just for doing the same thing over and over and over again. We have literally seen on this channel people who've been uploading for years that have 500 subscribers, and I think most people listening to this would think if I am uploading for like five or six years and I have 500 subscribers, I fail. Failure is a weird word because that really depends on what your goal was in the first place. If it was just to share your passion online, you've succeeded. If it's to be a big YouTuber, yeah sure you fail. What do you think is the realistic thing we can say to people about this? Your coach was really something else. Let me tell you.
Speaker 3:Which means I'm in that camp.
Speaker 2:I'm not so excited about it either. To be, honest, that's so well done. Can we let's talk a little bit about you? I don't want to go too deep into, like you know, your old channel, but you, you know you've had a lot of success when you were on YouTube before you came to vidIQ. What type of obstacles did you were you able to overcome and the doubts maybe you even had, like what were those things like and how did you overcome them?
Speaker 3:That's exciting at first.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 3:That's when I had the most doubts.
Speaker 2:Interesting.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 2:So it was almost like not imposter syndrome, but like, oh my God, I just did something big. Can I even do that again? Let me ask you a question and see how you answer, because I think every YouTuber will answer this differently. Did you ever have a moment where you felt like a successful YouTuber? Was there a moment, or even a length of time? Or did you always feel like, what's the next thing? Be honest, okay, as you should. As you should, it's fine, let's get started. I love it, yeah, yeah, yeah, tina's not ai.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it's weird because, um, youtube does pre-vet you to people and can be you know pros or cons to that. Like, if you're, if you're, a butthead on a line, then you might not get the job you wanted. I mean, it might be missing jobs, but it can, though, like and it's not even like the parasocial relationship which you hear so many people talk about. It's more about when someone connects with you through your content, for whatever reason, whether it be that it's similar to something that they already like, or they like the way you explain it, or the passion you show, or whatever they already feel like they know you a little bit before that.
Speaker 2:If there's ever a conversation between you, know, you and the other person, like, especially if you have a funnel, like you were saying, um, that, that part's done. They've already had that in their mind, which is kind of funny to say, but it's true. And they're like, okay, you're real's rock. I've seen everything else you've done. Let's make this happen. There was a time when, minimally, I was getting 25 000 views per video like minute. Like it was minimal and I was like I'm rocking it.
Speaker 2:I got this yeah uh, but that doesn't always last oh, don't I know it. Yes, yes, yes, I mean it was a good period of time, too. I felt like, oh, I figured youtube out, um, so then, and then I think there's just both sides around that are surrounded by am I really do? I really know what I'm doing? You know, it's that there's this middle part where it's like I got it, and the before and after it. We're like I don't think you know what you're doing. I don't know how this happened.
Speaker 3:I don't know how this happened.
Speaker 2:Right Right, let's be real about it. Let's just be real about it. That's what we do here. All right, one more email. This one is from the boost at video BitIQcom. It is Eduardo. I enjoy making videos. I look at my channel and I think it looks cute. First of all, I've never heard anyone talk about the.
Speaker 2:YouTube channel as being cute. Is your channel cute, tina? I mean, was it cute? Actually, I genuinely think my channel. What is happening? What is wrong with me? I'm surrounded by people who think their channels are cute.
Speaker 2:Okay, let me finish this. I like my thumbnails, my title and my niche. Now, to be honest, you should like all these things, so I feel like this is just normal. But okay, I'm not doing this for money, but I do want to build a community, to mean something and feel like I exist out there in the world. Now I celebrate this, that sentence. I celebrate because I feel like you will find a lot more success in chasing that than other things. That's true. You know what I mean and the self-fulfillment on another level.
Speaker 2:But then I see my videos getting basically zero views and no comments and I catch myself wondering how delusional do I have to be to keep going? I need to be delusional because, if not, I look at this with common sense and what I see is me putting myself out there to be made fun of for my trash videos. I know my videos are bad. I've made 10 so far. Nobody cares, no comments. So talking to a wall pretty much, and I see others in my needs, doing way better for way longer time. Somehow I managed to convince myself AKA, I get delusional to get up and record a video. That's how I see it. So what do you guys think? Do you think being a small YouTuber requires a bit of being delusional? And if so, how can we be more delusional to keep the motivation up and water? I like you a lot.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that's amazing, it's the Salulu.
Speaker 2:Oh my goodness, look at you.
Speaker 3:What was that? Words of wisdom from TikTok. Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2:So do you? You know, okay. So he says something interesting that flashed me back to a very early part of my YouTube journey, which was, um, you know, basically talking into the void. You know, I'm talking to a wall pretty much, and I remember when I first started. I'm looking at the camera and I'm talking and it's weird to have at first. It's not anymore, like I'm totally used to it. Now it's weird talking to an inanimate object and there's no one else in the room and you're supposed to be having, like a conversation with them.
Speaker 2:It's just so weird at first it's strange and it takes a while to get used to. So eduardo's saying is that delusional? I don't know if that's the right word, but I understand what he's saying. Is that delusional? I don't know if that's the right word, but I understand what he's saying. I get what he's saying To a certain degree. You're not wrong. Maybe you're more of a sociopath than being delusional.
Speaker 3:I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 2:Like, what do you think, Tina? What is this? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3:Very fair. Whoa, wow, I love that what about.
Speaker 2:I think you're right, like, because you are talking to no one at first and you have to. I remember very distinctly Also I now that we're talking about this, I'm getting some flashbacks to my early days and I remember very distinctly when I was setting up my camera stuff in my living room because that's where I used to shoot, thinking, all right, I'm, I'm doing this for a lot of people. I got to put this light on because all these people are going to care. I remember just thinking I was deluding myself, really thinking that these videos were going to be seen by thousands of people. Eventually they did. They were seen by thousands, but at the time I had like 20 subscribers Ain't no one going to watch this? But I did.
Speaker 2:In the moment I was walking the walk of a quote bigger youtuber, you know, looking back, like. Did that help me? Maybe? It certainly helped me look at my content in a way, maybe a little more critically, so that I could make changes faster when I would find things that weren't working. Because if you hold yourself accountable and hold yourself to a higher standard, there's more likelihood of you correcting things that need to be corrected, uh, instead of being the Lulu all the time. Whatever that is, we need to hashtag the Lulu with these shirts out there.
Speaker 2:I think to a certain degree it is kind of silly that you know when you are successful the people are just tuning in to watch you make videos about. Whatever it is you're making videos about, if you step back from it and think about what life is, that's kind of that's kind of funny that you can do that and get paid for it. So if you can do that and get paid for it, so if that's kind of delusional to even think that that's an actual reality, you might as well just dilute it all the way and just jump into the delusional deep side of the pool.
Speaker 3:Yes, jump in. It's great out here.
Speaker 2:It's wonderful. It's a heated, delusional pool of diluted mess?
Speaker 2:Yes, but yeah, I think, with all that being said, you do talk to a lot of creators every week because you're one of the YouTube coaches here at vidIQ. Have you seen anything of interest people might be interested in? That's happening over the course of the last couple of weeks or months Trends in the community of creators that you work with that they're either struggling with that you think more people might be struggling with, or something that you've learned that's like oh, this is a hot fire tip. They're either struggling with you think more people might be struggling with, or something that you've learned.
Speaker 3:It's like, oh, this is, this is a hot fire tip that we can give to our listeners. I love to give our listeners latest hot fire fire tip. Hot, fire, hot fire tip.
Speaker 2:Oh, I like it's already secretive. The hot fire tip from Tina. Okay, yep, john talked about this right before he left that IQ, what?
Speaker 3:They're like oh, this is not a hot tip.
Speaker 2:Yeah, no, john's been doing it for a while, but he's a smart, he's a ridiculous scientist. But I mean, a lot of people haven't heard that before. He told us in the group. I don't know how many people he told, I don't even know if he told people on the podcast or not. It's actually really good.
Speaker 2:So, hearing it from your side too, the fact that you more proof that it's just optimizing for the things that work for that, and I think you can do almost the same thing with long form. Where else would you post long form? I say the same thing. I have been saying for years that when you have, if you're going to remake a video so, for example, if you have like the top 10 tools of 2024, and you're about to do it for 2025, you go back to the 2024 one and you do exactly what you were talking about Look at the dips and things, figure out where you can tighten things up maybe more B-roll, maybe less B-roll and then, when you're making the new video, shoot it with that in mind and edit it with that in mind. Look at, you have the literal blueprint of your previous video to kind of help forward you to make a successful second video. So same exact idea, except for not reuploading. This is like a newer video. Same idea, though, and, uh, it does work. So thank you for that.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah.
Speaker 2:Tina tip of the week, so well done. Uh, I think all of y'all love Tina here. I think we're going to have her back.
Speaker 3:So we think about that. Say that you love me, even if you don't.
Speaker 2:Say you love me in the comments, say we love Tina, so I don't get fired. That's right. We don't want that. We don't want that. We'll have her back for another episode. Thank you so much for joining me, tina. I greatly appreciate it. Thank you, you've done a fantastic job, giving us a lot of information about your dog I don't know what that was about and some fabulous. So thank you so much. And if you are interested in having Tina coach you, there is opportunities for that. There's a link for coaching in the show notes for the audio podcast and in the YouTube description, and maybe she can give you some more hot Tina tips. Get your channel to the next level. Thank you for joining us. We'll see y'all in the next one.
Speaker 1:We hope you enjoyed this episode of Tube Talk brought to you by vidIQ. Head over to vidIQcom. Slash Tube Talk for today's show notes and previous episodes. Enjoy the rest of your video making day.