The narrator provides a full keyword research course for 2024, covering how to spot new and emerging keywords in various niches like crypto, AI, software, food, travel, outdoor, finance, prepping, kitchen, music, gardening, power tools, fitness, gadgets, pets, and more.
He explains the two main types of keywords: informational (how-to) and transactional (product roundups). The goal is to rank content on Google to make money from affiliate revenue, ad revenue, sponsorships, and your own product.
When choosing a niche, find a unique sub-niche you enjoy and have some experience in, not too broad. Research keywords with paid tools like hrefs or free tools, look for low competition and decent search volume. Create mostly informational content with some transactional articles mixed in.
To rank content, focus on helpful, experience-based writing plus link building. Outreach to relevant sites for guest posts. Use AI like Chat GPT for brainstorming ideas, not full content creation.
Consider starting with blogging to make money, then expand to YouTube later to build a bigger audience and sell your own products. Choose an easier niche to start. Pick something you can create lots of content around and enjoy for the long term.
Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the text:
The narrator explains that YouTube is trying to compete with TikTok by giving new channels an extra boost in impressions and views to encourage them to keep posting content. He shows examples of channels getting hundreds of thousands of views on their first few videos, but then struggling to match that performance later on.
To take advantage of this "new channel boost," the narrator recommends starting a new channel and posting your best content there to trigger the boost. However, you need a specific niche and audience in mind - posting varied content to multiple audiences won't allow YouTube's algorithm to effectively promote your videos.
The narrator stresses the importance of satisfying your audience, not just getting clicks and watches. Use techniques like abrupt or emotional endings (citing MrBeast's videos) to leave viewers with a positive impression that translates to better survey ratings and more recommendations from the algorithm.
Don't put too much stock in average view duration metrics without context. A passionate subset of viewers may watch certain videos fully, skewing duration while limiting total views. Focus on overall views and watch time hours as clearer measures of what content is working.
Appeal in the form of titles, thumbnails and ideas plays a bigger role in getting initial views than perfectly executed videos. Spend up to 40% of your effort on ideation and packaging before creation. Test different thumbnails - YouTube's new tool will pick the best one based on watch time, not clicks.
Gradually make videos longer without losing quality to increase potential watch time per viewer. Top creators have steadily increased video length over time. The same principle applies with YouTube Shorts, where the longest shorts get more views on average.
The text provided contains the title "Welcome to Mindreader AI" but does not contain any other substantive information or main points to summarize. Without additional context or content, there is no factual information, surprising points, or key ideas to reduce to a 200-500 word summary.
If additional information, descriptions, stories, arguments, evidence, explanations, etc. are provided in future requests, I would be happy to condense the main points down to an appropriate length, wrapping important terms in HTML tags as specified.
The narrator starts by saying his previous videos on historical shorts went viral, getting over 200,000 views. He decides to create a new niche - Viking shorts - using AI tools like ChatGPT, Leonardo AI, and dup duub to generate scripts, images, animations, and voiceovers.
He emphasizes this is a full course on video creation and editing with AI, better than paid courses, and he's providing it for free. The goal is to help viewers make money by being first in the fresh Viking niche before it gets saturated.
After generating a Viking story script with ChatGPT and image prompts, he uses Leonardo AI to create 10 realistic images. He animates them with Leonardo's built-in tools. He generates a voiceover with dup duub and finds music on Pixabay.
He edits everything in Capcut, applying transitions, animations, effects, captions, and more. Finally, he shows how to set up a channel, do SEO with vid IQ, and make money once monetized by getting 10M views.