We’ve see that aggressive promotion might give that additional boost to your channel in the early weeks and months. However, as always, content is the King, the Queen, and the Holy Ghost.
So think about producing top-quality videos first, and match that with a top-notch promotion.
But before you being…
Create a subscribe link for your channel. This link will automatically subscribe a person to your channel.
In order to create it, add: ?sub_confirmation=1 at the end of your channel URL.
Example: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzDHTVhThC_VIT7kTchIQAg?sub_confirmation=1
To trace the clicks, sources, etc, generate a link in https://app.bitly.com/.
What has worked before?
1. Instagram
If you have a chance to adapt your content for Instagram without much additional work, it’s a good idea to do that. Instagram has a few useful tools that might increase external traffic to your channel.
It’s a good idea to start working on that 2-3 weeks before the actual launch. What is good to have:
Catchy bio with the link to your channel.
A few highlights where you explain about your project.
At least 6 posts/reels.
Your goal is to find creators with under 100K followers, who could be interested in collaborating with you. If you present your channel as a small project with a small team of enthussiasts (without referring to being part of a larger media), there are chances you can get a free collaboration. Or at least a reply.
The golden rule of negotiations: Make it for the person to say “NO” as hard as possible.
Be nice in communication and straight to the point. Some rules:
Keep it concise. Too much text will bore the reader.
If you can already prepare something for the person, do it: a visual example, the reels, story, text for a post.
Prepare all the necessary links in one place, so that the person doesn’t have to look around.
Always think what could be there for the creator. Promise future mentions on the YouTube channel, offer any sort of cervices your team could provide with little effort.
Out of our projects, Cuddle Buddies has the largest following on Instagram in tire-1 countries. So first think of possible integrations there.
Types of content that work:
Story with a link
Pined link to your channel in bio
Collaboration option
Make a list of creators that work in the same field but are not your competitors per se.
E.g. if you’re a celebrity channel, writing to a similar media would not work. Rather write to an influencer who posts on a similar topic, or likes celebrity content.
Possible flow:
A short introduction of your channel and your goals. Do not include the link to your channel in the message, rather direct them to your home page on Instagram.
Mention that you are a small team and ask for their feedback on your work. Don’t request a collaboration right away. Friendships are more important.
If they don’t reply within 3 days, follow up with a new message.
If they reply engage in a conversation and ask if they’ll be interesting in mentioning you in a story or a reels.
If nothing, ask for a paid promotion and dance from there.
It’s a good idea to take advantage of a “collaboration” tool on Instagram if you can create a piece of content FOR them or TOGETHER with them.
On average, 1 out of 10 people replies. So you really need to work through a lot of creators. But this effort might pay off in a long run as well.
2. Reddit
Check relevant Reddit communities. Quite often you’ll be able to embed the link to your video.
Remember to check each community’s guidelines before posting.
Scroll through the community to see if other people posted YouTube links before.
To post your videos, log in with our account that has enough karma and history to post pretty much anywhere. Log in details:
John-Equal
JohnReddit$%20&
kitkxa@gmail.com
Monitor activity under your posts in the first 24 hours and engage with anyone who writes a comment under your video.
3. Existing YouTube channels
Run promotional content on our partner channels for as long as needed. However, communicate with the respective Video Lead as to the optimal content plan.
Ask to include your channel as featured on their channel.
Create posts for the YouTube community. Remember to adapt it to their style, tone of voice and audience. You’ll get more subscribers that way.
Photo-posts work best, with a natural, emotional photo. Format — a square.
Sometimes you can also create a square gif.
Polls work quite well too.
Create a story for one of your videos. It’s better to create a two-part story. The first 15 seconds bait the viewer with the preview and the second link should contain a link to your video.
Once a week ask them to include one of your videos as an end screen on popular videos.
Ask to insert your channel as card on one video per week.
Create a table for each channel where you will be able to trace the progress and results.
4. Banner
Since everyone who sees when they go to your channel, it’s a good chance to ask people to subscribe. Just try make it as natural and funny as possible.
Ask to reach the nearest milestone: 500/1000/5000 subscribers.
Example
5. Comment under competitors' videos
This method generally will not increase your subscriber base exponentially, however, can give that nice boost.
Be friendly and use natural language. Try to establish a friendly relationship with subscribers of your competitors:
Find similar videos on the competitor’s channel
The video should either rank at the top, or be among 5 recent uploads with more than 10K views.
Using the VidIQ extension for Chrome, filter the comments to the “newest” or “containing questions”.
Answer the question comments or interesting comments.
Regularly check for the answers. In case someone answers, try establishing a connection. While mentioning that you have a channel of your own in the second or third message.
Give detailed answers that might encourage you to check your channel;
Make a funny pun on their comment.
Ask questions, if the comment allows.
Regularly check for the answers. In case someone answers, try establishing a connection and mention that you have a channel of your own in the second or third message.