4 secrets to selling your online course on YouTube (from an 8-figure course creator)
Summary
TLDRThe video script offers a comprehensive guide for entrepreneurs looking to leverage their YouTube channel for business growth. It emphasizes the distinction between a content creator and an entrepreneur on YouTube, stressing the importance of targeting the right audience over gaining a large subscriber base. The speaker shares a proven methodology that has helped numerous individuals monetize their skills and services, and provides four key secrets to selling services, courses, and consulting on YouTube. These include avoiding common mistakes, focusing on the right metrics, creating evergreen content, and structuring videos for sales conversion. The script also introduces the H.O.T. script formula for video content, which stands for Hook, Outcome, and Testimonial, designed to engage viewers and guide them towards taking the desired action. By following these strategies, the speaker assures that even with a small audience, it's possible to generate significant revenue through a YouTube channel.
Takeaways
- ๐ฏ Focus on being an entrepreneur rather than just a creator on YouTube to effectively monetize your channel.
- ๐ซ Avoid the common mistake of targeting a large audience at the expense of accuracy; aim for a targeted viewership instead.
- ๐ Emphasize content that serves your ideal client's needs, not just what might go viral or get the most views.
- ๐ Prioritize metrics that reflect the quality of engagement over vanity metrics like view count and subscriber numbers.
- ๐ Leverage YouTube's search functionality to attract your ideal audience through evergreen, keyword-rich content.
- ๐ ๏ธ Utilize the H.O.T. script formula (Hook, Outcome, Testimonial) to structure your videos for maximum retention and engagement.
- ๐ฌ Pay attention to the quality and depth of comments from your audience as a sign of genuine engagement and impact.
- ๐ Create content that speaks directly to your ideal client's current situation and their readiness to invest in a solution.
- ๐ฑ Use a clear call to action at the end of your videos to guide viewers towards the next step, such as signing up for an email list or booking a call.
- ๐ Don't be disheartened by low view counts on highly targeted videos; what matters is the conversion rate of those views into clients.
- ๐ฑ Build a loyal audience by consistently providing valuable content that addresses the needs of your ideal viewer.
Q & A
What is the primary difference between using YouTube as a creator versus an entrepreneur?
-The primary difference lies in the focus: creators aim to build a large audience for brand deals or AdSense revenue, while entrepreneurs aim for accuracy, targeting the right viewers who are potential clients for their services or products.
How much revenue has the speaker's YouTube channel generated since its inception?
-The speaker's YouTube channel has generated well over eight figures in online course sales.
What is the significance of Geoffrey's success story as mentioned in the script?
-Geoffrey's story is significant because it demonstrates the potential of using YouTube for business without relying on paid advertising. He went from zero to $1 million in core sales within 18 months.
What does the acronym CTR stand for and why is it important for YouTube videos?
-CTR stands for Click-Through Rate, which is important because it measures how many people are actually clicking on a video after seeing its thumbnail or title. A higher CTR indicates better engagement.
Why is retention considered the most important metric by the speaker?
-Retention is considered the most important metric because it indicates how much of the video viewers are watching. High retention suggests that the content is engaging and valuable to the audience.
What is the H.O.T. script formula and how does it contribute to video retention?
-The H.O.T. script formula stands for Hook, Outcome, Testimonial. It contributes to video retention by quickly engaging viewers within the first 30 seconds to a minute, outlining what they'll learn, and building trust through social proof.
What is the recommended approach for an entrepreneur to grow their YouTube channel?
-The recommended approach is to focus on creating evergreen content that is keyword-heavy and search-optimized to attract the ideal client. This strategy helps retrain the YouTube algorithm to promote the channel to a more targeted audience.
How does the speaker suggest leveraging YouTube's internal traffic sources?
-The speaker suggests starting with search traffic to feed the algorithm with the right information about the ideal viewer and the channel's focus. As the algorithm learns, it will then support the channel through suggested and browse traffic sources.
What is the importance of understanding the ideal client for creating evergreen content?
-Understanding the ideal client is crucial because it allows the creator to produce content that speaks directly to the client's needs and stage in their journey. This increases the likelihood of converting viewers into leads or clients.
Why should an entrepreneur not be overly concerned with the number of views on their YouTube videos?
-An entrepreneur should focus on the quality of views rather than the quantity. Targeted views from the right audience are more valuable than a high volume of views from an untargeted audience.
What is the role of a call to action (CTA) at the end of a YouTube video for an entrepreneur?
-A CTA is essential to guide viewers on what to do next, such as visiting a website or signing up for an email list. It helps in capturing the interest of viewers who have watched the video and converting them into leads or customers.
How does the speaker define success on YouTube for an entrepreneur?
-Success is defined by the ability to create content that resonates with the ideal viewer, as measured by retention rates and the quality of viewer engagement, rather than just the number of views or subscribers.
Outlines
๐ Monetizing YouTube for Business: An Introduction
The speaker expresses excitement about the video's content, which is aimed at individuals who have a YouTube channel but are unsure how to use it for business purposes. The channel has generated significant revenue from online course sales, and the speaker has developed a methodology that has helped others monetize their skills and services. Success stories are shared, and the speaker invites viewers to learn about combining YouTube with online courses for business growth. The video promises to reveal four secrets to selling services and courses on YouTube, focusing on avoiding common mistakes, understanding the right metrics, and optimizing content for sales.
๐ฏ Targeting the Right Audience on YouTube
The paragraph discusses the importance of focusing on the right audience rather than just growing a large subscriber base. It outlines the difference between a content creator's approach versus an entrepreneur's approach on YouTube. The speaker emphasizes the concept of 'accuracy' over 'audience size' and explains the content scaling funnel, which includes viral, depth, and evergreen content. The goal is to attract targeted viewers who are potential clients for services, courses, or products offered through the channel.
๐ Leveraging YouTube's Traffic Sources Strategically
The speaker explains the importance of being strategic with YouTube's traffic sources, which include search, suggested, and browse. The focus should be on search traffic to attract the right viewers, which then influences suggested and browse traffic. The paragraph highlights the need to align content with the ideal client and the topics that the channel wants to be known for. It also discusses the concept of 'hockey stick growth' and the importance of building an audience of loyal subscribers who are the right fit for the channel's offerings.
๐ง Understanding the True Metrics That Matter for Entrepreneurs
This paragraph addresses the misconceptions around YouTube's ranking system and emphasizes that views and audience size are not the only metrics that matter for entrepreneurs. Instead, the focus should be on the quality of views, with an emphasis on click-through rate (CTR), retention, and the depth and quality of comments. The speaker argues that it's more important to have an engaged audience that cares about the content, even if the numbers are smaller, rather than a large audience that is not invested in the channel's success.
๐ Analyzing Key YouTube Metrics for Business Growth
The paragraph delves into specific YouTube metrics such as watch time, views, subscribers, and velocity, explaining how these metrics should be interpreted in the context of an entrepreneur's goals. It stresses that while views are often the focus for creators, for entrepreneurs, the retention of viewers and the conversion of those viewers into clients are more important. The speaker encourages looking beyond vanity metrics to understand the true impact of the content on the target audience.
๐ Structuring Videos for Maximum Impact and Conversion
The speaker introduces the H.O.T. script formula (Hook, Outcome, Testimonial) for structuring videos to engage viewers and encourage them to take action. The importance of providing value quickly is emphasized, as viewers are not there for the creator but for the solution to their problem. The paragraph outlines how to use the H.O.T. formula to create an impactful introduction, provide value throughout the video, and include a clear call to action at the end to convert viewers into leads and sales.
๐ Engaging with the Audience and Converting Views into Sales
The final paragraph focuses on the importance of engaging with the audience through comments and using a call to action to direct viewers to a conversion site or email list. It highlights the strategy of nurturing viewers into loyal customers through continued value provision and communication. The speaker also invites viewers to seek further information and training on leveraging YouTube for business, providing a link for additional resources.
Mindmap
Keywords
๐กYouTube Channel
๐กMonetization
๐กMethodology
๐กEvergreen Content
๐กTargeted Viewers
๐กContent Scaling Funnel
๐กIdeal Client
๐กTraffic Source Strategy
๐กMetrics
๐กVideo Structure
๐กConversion
Highlights
The speaker has generated over eight figures in online course sales through their YouTube channel.
A developed methodology has helped thousands monetize their skills, services, consulting, coaching, and online courses.
Success stories include going from no audience to significant sales and subscriber growth in various fields.
The website workwithsunny.com is provided for those interested in learning more about online business growth.
Four secrets for selling services on YouTube are introduced as game changers.
Entrepreneurs often mistakenly view YouTube as a platform for creators rather than a business tool.
The importance of focusing on accuracy rather than growing a large audience for entrepreneurial success on YouTube.
Different metrics matter for entrepreneurs compared to creators on YouTube.
Targeted viewers are more valuable than a large audience for converting viewers into clients.
The content scaling funnel includes viral, depth, and evergreen content strategies.
Evergreen content, despite lower initial views, provides targeted leads and long-term value.
Identifying the ideal client, their readiness to invest, and the specific transformation they seek is crucial for content creation.
The five fundamentals of a successful business include knowing the offer, ideal client, messaging, lead generation, and sales.
The importance of creating evergreen content that aligns with the ideal client's needs.
Strategies for leveraging YouTube's internal traffic sources: search, suggested, and browse.
The necessity of being strategic and intentional with content to reach the right audience.
An explanation of YouTube's algorithm and how it categorizes channels based on content and audience interaction.
The H.O.T. script formula (Hook, Outcome, Testimonial) for structuring videos to increase retention and conversion.
The emphasis on retention and quality of comments over vanity metrics like views for entrepreneurial success.
How to convert viewers into leads and sales through strategic video content and a clear call to action.
Transcripts
I'm so excited about this video.
If you're sitting there going, "Okay, well, I have a YouTube channel, but I have no freaking
clue how to actually use it for my business," or it's just not working, this should do the
trick for you.
Not only have I been able to...
It's crazy to say, but this channel has now generated well over eight figures just in
online course sales since I started it.
Wild.
But I also have created a methodology that has helped thousands of other people monetize
their skills, their services, their consulting, their coaching, and their online courses,
anywhere from $10,000 a month all the way up to people making 2 to $3 million a year.
And you can see some of those examples right now.
Geoffrey, who started with no audience and no business, went from zero to $1 million
in core sales using his YouTube channel and no paid advertising in 18 months.
Liz Sharma went from 100 subscribers on her channel to 18,000 and a six-figure business
teaching European Portuguese.
Chelsea became a six-figure oil painter thanks to her channel.
Brandon, whose channel generated $3 million last year with under 30,000 subscribers.
And Ally took her yoga practice online and 4Xed her business with the combination of
YouTube and her online course.
And if you're curious about that, you can go to workwithsunny.com.
We'll put the link in the description.
But without further ado, let's get into these four secrets, okay?
Because they are going to be a game changer for you.
Click like if you're excited.
Be sure to subscribe and let's dive in.
So, what are we going to go over today?
And what are the four secrets for how to sell your services, your online course, your consulting,
your coaching on YouTube?
These are them.
So, the number one mistake that entrepreneurs make on YouTube that costs them time, energy,
and a lot of money.
Number two, the traffic source strategy to make YouTube actually work for you and in
your favor.
Number three is the metrics that actually matter, not the ones you think matter to your
business.
And then number four is optimizing for sales.
So, actually structuring your video content so you can convert viewers into paying clients.
Let's do it.
So, the number one mistake that entrepreneurs make on YouTube is they think about YouTube
from the lens of being a creator versus being an entrepreneur.
Now, why is this such a major difference that is so important to understand?
Because creators, your main focus and your intention...
When I say creator, it's not that you can't be both.
It's just that if you're solely a creator and you are trying to monetize yourself specifically,
through brand deals or through getting paid via AdSense, it means that your end goal has
to be building a big, huge audience and a targeted audience that these brands or that
YouTube actually wants to help you monetize and wants to pay you for.
The difference for an entrepreneur is that your main focus is accuracy.
So, you do not need a big audience in order to have a very successful channel as an entrepreneur,
in terms of speaking to the right people, having a very clear intention behind your
content, and actually converting those people and those viewers into clients that you can
have a super deep impact on through your services if you're a consultant, a coach, a course
creator, et cetera.
So, it's audience, growing a big, huge audience and focusing on the subscribers, the views,
all that stuff, versus accuracy.
So, if accuracy is your goal, your metrics that are important to you are very different.
So, I'm going to talk about the metrics that actually matter as an entrepreneur, which
are vastly different than a creator, in just a second.
But what I really want to hone in on here is that you don't need a big audience, you
certainly don't need a lot of subscribers and you don't even need a ton of viewers to
monetize a YouTube channel as an entrepreneur.
You don't even need to hit the 4,000 hours watch time and 1,000 subscribers.
We've had plenty of clients start bringing in thousands of dollars in revenue far before
they get to that point, because they have something to sell from their channel in terms
of an online course, services, et cetera.
Make sense?
So, targeted viewers are your main goal as an entrepreneur.
And so what happens is, and the mistake that creates a lot of unnecessary tension on your
channel and a lot of creating YouTube videos without seeing any return or any clients or
any leads coming in the door, is directly related to what I call the content scaling
funnel.
So, you have viral, you have depth and you have evergreen.
So, the differences between these layers is that if you are going the viral route and
you're trying to reach a really broad audience and a big audience, you're going to do topics
that are more beginner-focused, kind of surface level topics.
And that means that people who watch these kinds of videos then have to go through three
layers and a lot of education in order to become an actual lead or client for your business.
So, these topics are not speaking directly to who your ideal client is.
They're speaking to who your ideal client is a year, two years prior to them being ready
to actually work with you.
So, this grows your audience but it doesn't necessarily bring in leads.
Now, depth content is more focused on somebody who is a little closer and a little more ready
and at a place in their journey where they're ready to make the decision to actually hire
somebody or work with somebody, and that could be you.
But this person is still not quite there.
So, depth content is really about building loyalty with your audience and subscribers
so that they keep coming back and watching your content so that they can be nurtured
into becoming a hot lead.
Now, the bottom of your funnel, this is going to get the least amount of use initially,
but these videos are going to work for you over time.
They're going to bring in what we call evergreen traffic, because anyone in the world who is
searching for a topic that is evergreen is going to find you if you make that content.
We're going to talk about this more in-depth in a second, and how to really leverage these.
But what you need to understand is sometimes the videos that get the least amount of views
have the hottest leads in the most targeted audience, and you'll understand why that's
vitally important and why it actually works in your favor to have less views but more
targeted views when we get into traffic sources.
So, evergreen content brings in the least amount of views initially, but it will continue
to bring in views over time and continue to rack up views and leads every single day,
because it's content that is easily discoverable by people all over the world searching for
the solution to the problem that you solve, or the answer to the question that you are
providing through your business.
And so it's like a magnet for the right people to come into you.
So, don't expect this big surge of growth from it, but expect really hot leads.
So, clients of ours who focus strictly on this kind of content, they're generating,
like I said, anywhere from $10,000 a month to all the way up to $300,000 a month with
a very small audience just by focusing on this kind of content.
And something that I've talked about a lot recently for you to figure out what kind of
content this actually is, is you want to think about who are you serving?
And so you have to think about it from the lens of, who is your ideal client?
And if you've watched a few of my recent videos, you understand that in terms of building a
really successful business of any kind, there are really core, fundamental factors that
have to apply.
So, you have your offer, first and foremost.
You have to know what you're providing in terms of your course or your service.
And then from there, you have to know who your ideal client actually is and how to speak
to them, how to reach them, et cetera.
From there you clarify your messaging so that platforms like YouTube can actually convert
for you and you're not just wasting time making random content on the internet that doesn't
turn into anything for you, which can be really frustrating.
And then from there, you how to bring in leads, which then turns into sales.
And once you have those five fundamentals sorted, then you start to build up a team
and operations in your business and you're set up to scale to the moon.
So, when it comes to creating evergreen content, it's hard to create this and actually attract
the right viewers that turn into paying clients if you don't know who they are.
So, the three factors of your ideal client is one specific ideal client.
This is the important part.
One specific place on their journey where they're most ready to invest.
And then finally, seeking one specific transformation.
When you have these three factors dialed, which is what we really focus on when we work
with our clients and creating their online course and then scaling it using YouTube,
you then know exactly what kind of content to make.
So, it's things like FAQs from these kinds of clients.
It's hot topics that are really, really relevant to these kinds of clients.
And like I said, these are not going to be these hugely viral videos, but they're going
to be super, super relevant to the right people who are going to be at the stage on their
journey where they're going, "Oh my gosh, I have found the person that I need to work
with and pay and hire because they really know what they're talking about."
So, the more you can create content that speaks to these people and adds value to these people.
You are not directly selling from YouTube ever.
You are providing value so that you can be discovered through these videos, through search
on YouTube every single day from people around the world.
That's why it's such a magical platform, because you don't even have to be working and people
are finding you every single day.
And that's how my channel was able to grow the way that it did and why it's been able
to generate so much revenue for my business.
Now, let's talk about my traffic source strategy to turn viewers into clients even if you have
a teeny tiny audience and not a lot of viewers.
Remember that one viewer is one potential client for your business if this is done the
right way.
So, there are three key traffic sources on YouTube.
You have search, you have suggested, and you have browse.
As a creator who doesn't have services or a business to sell from the back end of their
channel, you're focused really on suggested and you're focused on browse.
Because you want to build your audience.
You want to get as many eyeballs on your channel as possible.
Because like I said, that's how you monetize.
You monetize through an audience.
Whereas for an entrepreneur who's leveraging YouTube, you have to be very, very, very strategic
and intentional about this.
Because reaching the wrong people...
And sometimes even going viral can actually work against you, your business and your channel.
So, the two key factors that you have to dial in prior to really being able to grow your
channel in the right way on YouTube and reach the right people are, who are you trying to
reach, which we just went over in terms of who is your ideal client, and what do you
want to be known for?
And every piece of content you create on YouTube needs to align with these two key factors.
If it doesn't, you run the risk of creating content that then reaches people who are not
a match for your ideal client.
And that can actually mess with the algorithm and mess with your channel.
Because what the algorithm does when content succeeds is they go, "Hmm, that's really interesting.
Okay.
This video reached all these kinds of different people and it did really well for the channel.
So, this channel must be about that thing," even if it's not.
And so any other piece of content that you make that's maybe for specifically your ideal
client, as I was talking about earlier, it's not going to be pushed by the internal traffic
sources because that's not what you've told YouTube your channel is about.
And I'm sure you might be able to relate to this because it's happened to a lot of people,
myself included.
Because my channel is a testing ground.
I've been a guinea pig on YouTube for so long and I've tried so many things and have made
so many mistakes, but it's why I'm able to support people in doing this the right way
in the most intentional way now, because I've done all of the things.
I have so many videos that I created that I look back and go, "Who was that for?"
And it messed with things on my channel big time.
So, being intentional saves you so much time and so much headache.
So, the three traffic sources in how you actually leverage these, it has to, as an entrepreneur,
remember this, it has to start with search.
Because you want to think about YouTube as pretty much free advertising.
The more you focus on search traffic, so you're making content that is evergreen and discoverable
through search, the more you're discovered by your ideal clients every single day.
And that is feeding the algorithm with the right information of who you want to reach
and what you want to be known for.
And then what starts to happen is the more intentional you are with your content...
Even if you have a channel already and you've kind of messed things up, it's okay.
This strategy still works.
You just got to retrain the algorithm.
So, you start with search.
And then from there it goes into suggested and browse.
So, the more that you feed the algorithm with the right information and get really targeted
about the keywords that you're using and the topics that you're using in terms of who you
want to reach in the beginning and what you want to be known for, the more that it's going
to know how to leverage suggested and browse traffic sources to reach more of those people.
Having said that, in the beginning your main focus is retaining your original viewers.
So, the people who first start to subscribe to your channel, making sure that they are
the right ideal viewers is going to help you a ton because, if you're making specific intentional
content for these people, it means they're then going to come back and watch more of
your content.
Because you're all of a sudden the go-to expert that they want to listen to.
It doesn't matter how big your audience is.
The more valuable your content is, the more they're going to want to come back.
And the more specific it is, the more they know what you're all about and what to expect
on your channel.
So, they'll come back.
So, the goal is, you start with search.
Focus on keyword-heavy evergreen content.
Start to become known for these two things inside the algorithm.
Then the algorithm starts to support you and pushes your channel through suggested and
browse traffic, which shows up on the homepage and in the side panel, to your original viewers.
These people then become super, super loyal.
And then what happens is you build this little army of your first subscribers who are bought
into your channel and bought into you as the authority.
And then from there, YouTube and the algorithm then goes, "Oh, I know exactly what this channel's
about, who it's trying to reach and what it wants to be known for, so now we're going
to push it to even more people, just like this key group right here, through suggested
and browse."
So, at first you're getting pushed by suggested and browse to your original subscribers and
viewers.
Next, the more you are known for these two factors, YouTube then starts to work in your
favor and starts to work for you and uses its internal traffic sources to push your
content to more of those people using these traffic sources, but not necessarily pushing
you to just your subscribers and viewers.
It's also now pushing you to all of the people on YouTube who match this original audience.
That's when YouTube really starts to take off and we call this the hockey stick growth
strategy.
And I'm not necessarily talking about growth in numbers.
I'm talking about growth in accuracy, remember?
So, it builds this really accurate audience.
Because if you just grow a really broad audience and you go super wide and you have no idea
what you're really posting about on YouTube, it screws with everything.
Because then YouTube goes, "What is this channel trying to be known for?
And I don't really know where to position it or help it reach the right people.
So, we're just not really going to help it."
And it creates more time and effort on your side to try and reach more people, which creates
a lot of extra stress and work for you.
So, this is kind of the lazy route.
We want you to be able to feed the algorithm with the right information so you can sit
back.
You don't have to create more than one video a week.
You can even create less than that, but every piece of content's intentional and feeding
it with the right information so it can help you grow.
Got it?
And to really drive this point home, how I describe it is it's really a flywheel.
When you think about how YouTube works, particularly being an entrepreneur on the platform, this
is how I've broken it down.
So, I call this cracking the code on YouTube.
So, first and foremost, you got to know who your ideal viewer is.
And oftentimes that's your ideal client.
So, ideal viewer.
Then you make relevant content for that viewer.
So, it can trigger suggested and browse.
And then from there the algorithm, I'm just going to say, algorithm cat, the algorithm
then knows how to categorize you.
And then it uses its internal traffic sources, search, suggested, browse, to reach more of
your ideal viewer with less effort.
Because then it's actually helping your channel grow as opposed to you having to put in all
the effort in pushing out content.
And that's where the real magic happens.
And that's why we call it an evergreen sales machine when it's done the right way.
And you don't need a big, huge audience.
So, now let's talk about a controversial topic.
Because I totally understand and I've fallen into this trap myself.
When you're on YouTube you're like, "Why am I not getting more views?
Why does nobody care about my content?"
As an entrepreneur, you got to put that to the side.
Your ego, not your amigo, my friend.
If you are a creator and you rely on views and an audience size and all that stuff, different
ballgame.
Totally understand it.
I've had to come to terms with the fact that, because I'm an entrepreneur, that's not my
game.
And so I actually have reached a place where the views really don't matter.
The quality of the views matter.
So, the metrics that actually matter as an entrepreneur, I'm going to break them down,
but the biggest thing I wanted to hone in on as well is because there's something new
on YouTube, new-ish, it's been around for quite a while now, but it can really mess
with your head as an entrepreneur or as a creator on YouTube.
There's always a ranking for every video you post, right?
And sometimes it's going to say a 10 out of 10.
10 out of 10 actually means it's done horribly.
It doesn't in actuality, though.
It's done horribly based on the vanity metrics on YouTube.
It hasn't done horribly in terms of reaching the right people.
Sometimes my videos that have gotten the worst ranking have actually brought in the best
clients that I could imagine because they're super-hyper-targeted and the video's not meant
to reach a huge audience.
It's meant to reach the right audience and convert those viewers into people who actually
want to work with us in our business.
So, I just wanted to clarify this ranking because don't let a mess with your head.
Okay.
Next up, the metrics that actually matter.
So, let's break these down.
So, number one is CTR.
And they kind of have to go in this sequential order, because if they don't then you really
don't know how to troubleshoot and fix things.
But CTR is important because it's your click-through rate.
So, if people aren't clicking on the video, then they're not watching it.
Now, here's where this can get a little bit confusing and can also mess with your head.
All of these can, FYI, but you need to know and understand how to read them as an entrepreneur.
So, for your CTR, the most important thing is to understand that your CTR percentage
is based on, out of all of the people that are seeing your thumbnail and seeing your
video through the traffic sources, how many people are actually clicking.
Anything above 2% is considered decent.
It can go 2 all the way up to 10+%.
So, anything above 10 is freaking phenomenal.
But you also have to understand this is kind of deceiving.
Because there's actually a click-through rate for each different traffic source.
If this video that you've created is very bottom of the funnel and evergreen content,
your entire subscriber base might not be interested.
Therefore, it might damage the CTR slightly, but it's not telling you the whole picture.
Because even if it's got a low click-through rate, if your retention on the video is good,
it means that it actually hit home and landed with your ideal viewer.
So, that's still a metric for success.
So, CTR's a little deceiving, but CTR's the first metric you want to look at.
The next one is retention.
And I would say this, for me, hands down the most important and the thing I look at the
most.
Retention means how much of the video are people watching.
And anything about 40% is actually pretty darn good.
I know it doesn't sound great, but it's actually pretty good in YouTube standards.
And the reason that this means so much, and another way that you can qualify it is, instead
of looking at the views or subscribers that the video brings in, it actually tells you
how much do your people care?
How much are they actually watching every video?
If they're not watching your video but you have millions of subscribers and views, it
doesn't matter.
Because your content's not actually doing anything or making an impact.
So, retention is everything, in my opinion, and focusing on this as opposed to anything
else is going to help you sleep better at night and come to terms with the fact that
you don't need to have a big, huge audience in order to really impact people through your
channel.
And another piece of this is, what are the quality of your comments on your channel?
This is a big one for me.
I want to see comments that go deep from people who watch my channel.
That tells me I'm doing a good job and I'm attracting the right people who actually care.
It doesn't matter about the volume.
It matters about the depth and the quality.
And that's directly related to retention because if they're watching the whole thing they're
going to be commenting throughout, and that's a huge sign of success.
So, from there, watch time.
How much watch time?
Is it accumulating on your channel?
Because obviously watch time is important.
And are people staying on your channel?
Are they continuing to watch other videos?
Have you set up playlists so that people can go from one video to the next?
Watch time is important.
It's not the be-all end-all, but it is a big metric on YouTube.
You want people to have a binge watch effect on your channel.
And then the next thing from there is obviously views.
But again, this is very deceiving.
Because like I said, in the content scaling funnel, some of your highest converting videos
are going to be the ones that have the least amount of views but the most targeted views.
So, take this number with a grain of salt and qualify it truly based on retention more
than you base your success on views.
I genuinely, at this point in my career, don't look at the views or care how many views I
get.
I care about the depth and the quality and how long people are watching the video.
Because I know my content's not meant for the masses.
It's meant for my ideal viewers.
And then from there, subs.
So, how many subscribers did this particular video bring in?
And if it's bringing in a ton of your ideal subscribers, you want to focus on doubling
down on that content because it's actually going to bring in more of those people.
And if people subscribe because of this video topic, if you make more video topics just
like that, you're actually going to appease and get higher views from your existing subscriber
base, which is going to push it more in suggested and browse to more people just like that.
And then the final piece is velocity.
So, you might have seen this before.
And again, this kind of goes hand in hand with this ranking up here.
So, you want to take it with a grain of salt and really audit what the intention of the
video was.
Because if the intention of the video was to go viral, which to be fair, you don't have
a ton of control over it.
There are strategies to go viral.
It's something that I talk about, but you don't have a ton of control when a video goes
viral and that can get risky for all of the reasons that I've mentioned.
But essentially, velocity is the graph that you see and the analytics on YouTube where,
let's say this is your average velocity of your video.
It means that the video started here and it went all the way up like this.
So, that means you had really high velocity.
So, it means when you published the video, your audience was super excited to watch it
and it went way up.
But again, when you create evergreen bottom of the funnel content that's for your exact
ideal client, your velocity is not going to be great.
So, it's also a bit of a deceiving metric.
These are the metrics I watch, but the one I really care about is retention and quality
of comments.
And I can tell you, the minute that you focus on that instead of everything else and thinking
your videos suck because you're not getting a lot of views or subscribers, the more peaceful
and happy and impactful you can be as an entrepreneur.
Because you're not caught up in the Monopoly money of vanity metrics and you actually care
about the real human beings that you're able to serve through your content on YouTube,
and turn into people who really believe in you and believe in what you're doing and want
to work with you and be a part of your community for life.
That's what actually matters.
The numbers are deceiving.
The fourth secret is video structure.
And again, this is different.
This is different for creators versus entrepreneurs.
And like I said, yes, you can be both, but the intention has to be very, very clear if
you're an entrepreneur and it has to be about accuracy and getting the right people to watch.
And you also have to recognize the cold hard truth, that if you're an entrepreneur on YouTube,
it's really not about you.
Whereas if you are a brand and a creator and an influencer, people are bought into you.
As an entrepreneur, people are bought into the value you provide solving their problem,
answering their question and making a transformation in their lives or their businesses or whatever
it is that you offer.
It's a big difference.
And so how you structure your videos is really important.
Because when I talk about selling your services, your online course, your consulting, your
coaching on your YouTube channel, like I said earlier, I'm not talking about creating a
video that says, "Want to buy my stuff?"
Because you got to treat it like you would treat meeting someone in real life.
You don't just immediately go in for a pitch.
You got to know the person.
You got to understand the person.
You got to know if they're the right fit for you.
You got to know if you can help them.
You got to know who you're speaking to and what you want to be known for so you track
the right audience, and then you got to structure a video in a way where it actually sets you
up for success.
So, we call it the H.O.T.
script formula.
I've been using this and coined this a long time ago, and so many people have now used
this and I love it.
It's part of my methodology.
And really what it means is hook, outcome, testimonial.
And why this is important as an authority figure, as an entrepreneur, is that it positions
you as someone who people want to listen to, trust, and actually want to tune in for the
whole video.
And what did I say was the most important metric?
Retention.
So, this script is set up for retention.
So, if you look at it on a graph, how it looks is, this is the intro of the video, 30 seconds
to one minute.
This is the meat of video and the value of the video.
This is the outro.
Why is it this way?
Because as an entrepreneur, you're a problem solver.
So, people are clicking on your video for the most part because they're discovering
it and going, "Oh my gosh, this is exactly what I need."
So, sitting there for two minutes at the beginning explaining why someone should watch your video
screws with your retention.
Because people are not there for you.
They are there for the impact that you're providing and the answer or solution you're
providing.
So, you got to get to it.
So, in the beginning you use this.
Hook, outcome, testimonial.
So, it starts with the hook.
The hook is very simple.
You just want to reassure people in the room they're in the right spot.
Because how many times do you click on a YouTube video and you're like, "This is not what the
title says it is, and this is annoying."
So, you just want to say something like, "Yeah, this video is going to teach you the four
secrets to selling your online course on YouTube."
Reassuring.
It's hooking them.
It's bringing them in.
The outcome.
"By the end of this video, you're going to know how to confidently sell your services,
your coaching, your online course, using your YouTube channel."
Testimonial.
"I've helped thousands of people sell their online courses and scale all the way up to
millions of dollars a year consistently using this strategy."
And then you can show a few of them.
You might have noticed I actually did that at the beginning.
And it reassures people that they can listen to you and they can trust you, and they want
to invest and spend their time with you for the rest of the video.
So, you get through that in 30 seconds to one minute.
Then in the meat of the video you're providing value and you're solving the problem, answering
the question, giving them what they came for and why they clicked on this video.
They don't even know you half the time if they're clicking on this video.
If it's evergreen content, they just learned about you.
They're just discovering you.
So, you need to give them a reason to stay and provide serious amounts of value to them.
And then the end of the video, you want to include a call to action.
If you don't tell people where to go or what to do, you will never actually get results.
You can send people directly to your conversion site, whatever that may be.
If you have a Buy Now button, if you want people to apply to book a call, whatever it
may be, you want to send people to that conversion site so these people don't just find you on
YouTube, think your information's great, and then forget about you because they're getting
served 50,000 messages a day from other people online.
So, you have to capture the viewers that watch you on YouTube, and the easiest way to do
that is to send them to an email list.
And then on that email list, you're able to then provide even further value, stay in touch
with them, and nurture them into really trusting you and having the timing right for them to
actually invest in working with you.
And it builds this huge, amazing, loyal audience of people who are really excited about you
and the value that you provide.
So, this is how you structure your video to actually convert into leads and into sales.
If you found this video helpful, comments really are my love language.
So, I would love to hear what landed for you, what helped you, what light bulb moments you
had, and if you really do understand now that not all YouTube creators are made equally,
and if you have business and you are an entrepreneur, it's a bit of a different ball game.
Take it from someone who's kind of done it all and learned all of the things in the long
time that I've been on this platform.
So, like I said, if you had a light bulb moment, let me know in the comments below.
It really does make me feel happy and joyful.
And I'm so grateful that you tuned in.
And like I said, this is what I do for a living.
It is what I live for.
And I help people go from being this invisible expert to being able to scale their authority,
their income and their impact using online courses and YouTube.
So, if you want to learn more about that, just type workwithsunny.com, all lowercase,
into your browser, and you can check out my free training and actually speak to somebody
on my team about working with us.
And we'll also put the link in the description below.
Thank you so much for watching.
I have a whole playlist set up for you, duh, watch time, right here on how to create, market
and sell your online courses.
So, be sure to check out that next.
And let it be easy, friend.
YouTube is such an easy way to market your online course if it's done the right way and
if you do all the proper steps leading up to it.
So, I hope that you took that from this, that you don't have to work yourself into the ground
in order to have a really sustainable, scalable, successful business.
Are you with me?
See you in the next one.
Bye.
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