0:01 I grew a brand new YouTube channel from
0:04 zero all the way to 1,000 subscribers in
0:06 under 30 days but the craziest part is
0:09 that only 30 days later it's at 7,000
0:11 subscribers and Counting most YouTubers
0:12 say you need to spend 1 to 2 years
0:14 making videos before you see any growth
0:16 and this may have been the case in 2018
0:18 when they first started but in 2024
0:21 there is a new type of Channel like this
0:22 this and this getting hundreds of
0:24 thousands of subscribers in just a few
0:25 months and they all follow a
0:27 step-by-step strategy that I'm about to
0:29 share with you completely for free so
0:30 that you can apply apply it to your
0:32 channel and have your next video look
0:34 like this because when you know how big
0:35 YouTubers guarantee their videos go
0:37 viral you'll be able to consistently get
0:39 10,000 plus views on every video and
0:41 grow to 1,000 subscribers in the next 30
0:43 days all without having years of
0:46 experience genius IQ or money to invest
0:48 so to get your first 1,000 subscribers
0:50 you need around 25,000 views and most of
0:53 all YouTubers are averaging 100 to 1,000
0:54 views per video this means that it will
0:57 take you 25 to 250 videos to hit your
0:59 first 1,000 subscribers so the fact
1:01 fastest way to get 1,000 Subs fast is
1:03 simply increase the average views per
1:05 video and there's a genius strategy that
1:07 the big YouTubers use to do this to
1:09 guarantee their videos go viral and you
1:11 can use the same strategy on your small
1:13 Channel but they normally keep it behind
1:15 a pay wall in private WhatsApp groups or
1:16 among their close friends and I know
1:18 that because I've been in those rooms
1:20 and I've seen those conversations so
1:21 it's no wonder that they keep growing
1:23 bigger while you're still waking up with
1:25 no new subscribers and I've used the
1:27 same strategy on my channel to average
1:29 15,000 views per video meaning that I
1:31 only need to post twice to get 1,000
1:33 subscribers so once you understand this
1:34 strategy you'll be able to beat the
1:37 algorithm by only making proven videos
1:38 just like AR act did with this one just
1:40 like Mr Beast did with this one and just
1:42 like Jack Gordon did with this one it
1:45 all comes down to three simple steps
1:46 first I want you to go to the YouTube
1:48 homepage click on the search bar and
1:50 type in a keyword let's use Mr Beast
1:52 video train versus giant pit as an
1:54 example his idea has the base keywords
1:57 train and giant pit so if we sort by
1:59 train and then look up The View count we
2:02 see this video video pop up it got 163
2:05 million views in only 2 years but if we
2:07 put the Mr Beast video right next to it
2:09 we'll see some similarities now let's
2:10 look up the keyword dirt bike the first
2:12 image that we see looks like this which
2:14 is suspiciously similar to this video
2:17 done by AR lastly if we search up the
2:19 keyword bicycle we can match it to this
2:21 video by Jack Gordon I'm telling you all
2:23 of the big YouTubers do this and if you
2:25 apply this to your own videos you will
2:26 never see a 10 out of 10 again because
2:28 when you know how to find proven videos
2:30 you'll be able to model them and
2:31 consistently go viral and this will
2:33 increase your average views per video so
2:35 that you can hit 1,000 subscribers in
2:36 the next 30 days but to do this
2:38 successfully you need to remember that
2:40 most people try to model what works but
2:42 if that was the right way to do it then
2:43 everyone would be going viral I spent my
2:45 first 2 years creating content that was
2:47 modeled after other big YouTubers only
2:49 to see results like this every morning
2:51 but now that I've grown hundreds of
2:53 thousands of subscribers across multiple
2:54 channels I realize where most people go
2:57 wrong the key here is to steal like an
2:59 artist copy and paste thumbnails never
3:01 work so what you want to do is change at
3:03 least two things about each thumbnail
3:04 first off you want to recreate it using
3:06 better colors because most of these
3:08 thumbnails are pretty bland next you
3:09 want to add at least two elements that
3:11 weren't there before maybe that could be
3:13 an arrow bringing attention to the
3:14 center point of the thumbnail adding
3:16 your head shot to make it custom to you
3:18 or adding some sort of text that gives
3:20 context or curiosity about what's in the
3:21 video but if you really want the viewer
3:24 to watch there's about a 5-second window
3:25 after they click whether they decide to
3:27 leave the video or stay till the end and
3:29 I figured out a proven way to make sure
3:31 they stick around it all comes down to
3:33 confirmation bias if a viewer makes the
3:35 decision to click on your thumbnail they
3:37 want to feel like they've made the right
3:39 choice so your job is to give that to
3:40 them on a silver platter let's take a
3:42 look at the channel Preston goes his
3:44 title and thumbnail for this video were
3:46 modeled off of this video using the same
3:48 strategy we just went over but he takes
3:49 it one step farther you can see that
3:51 when we click into his video he uses the
3:53 exact same image as he used for the
3:55 thumbnail doing this gives the viewer
3:57 immediate satisfaction and gets them
3:59 past the dreaded 5-second Mark but once
4:00 your viewer has has stayed past the
4:02 5-second mark you need to keep them for
4:03 the rest of the video because they could
4:06 click off at any time therefore we need
4:07 to write a script that will trap the
4:09 viewer into watching your video so that
4:11 you can take your retention graphs from
4:13 this to this and I've put together a
4:16 three-step process to make sure viewers
4:17 stick around and if you're still here
4:19 right now I guess it works the first
4:21 step is writing a perfect intro look at
4:23 this graph the biggest drop off is in
4:25 the first 30 seconds and I guarantee if
4:27 you look at your videos you will also
4:29 notice the same thing after that the
4:31 line goes down slowly as viewers leave
4:33 throughout the video but it's not that
4:35 bad so the lower we can make this drop
4:36 in the beginning the higher we can start
4:39 that line at and increase our AP by 10
4:41 to 20% and that 10% could be the
4:43 difference between your video blowing up
4:45 or never seeing the YouTube homepage to
4:47 do this I'm about to give you a proven
4:49 intro framework by Colin and Samir and
4:51 this exact framework is the same reason
4:52 why you're here listening to me speak
4:54 because it targets the specific dopamine
4:55 pockets in the brain that make viewers
4:57 stick around the first line in your
4:59 intro should always immediately confirm
5:00 to The View viewer that this is the
5:02 video they clicked on and the packaging
5:04 is not clickbait plus there needs to be
5:06 social proof for example the first line
5:08 in this video was I grew a brand new
5:10 YouTube channel from zero all the way to
5:13 1,000 subscribers in under 30 days this
5:14 repeats the idea that this is a video
5:17 about growing on YouTube fast it also
5:19 has a smidge of social proof because I'm
5:20 showing I actually did it the next is
5:22 introduce new narratives and unclosed
5:24 Loops you want to convey this in a
5:26 simple manner visually to be easily
5:28 understood we do this by opening Loops
5:29 in the viewer's mind and open loop Loop
5:31 is essentially a question that hasn't
5:33 been answered yet so in this video I
5:35 said this but in 2024 there is a new
5:37 type of Channel like this this and this
5:39 getting hundreds of thousands of
5:41 subscribers in just a few months I
5:42 didn't actually ask a question but now
5:44 the viewer is wondering what makes these
5:46 channels different from M and if you pay
5:48 close attention I didn't actually answer
5:50 that until later in the video this
5:51 infiltrates into the viewer's
5:53 subconscious mind because they crave to
5:54 have their questions answered because
5:56 when that happens they get a big hit of
5:58 dopamine and if it doesn't happen
5:59 they're left with a feeling of in
6:01 completeness now the third line that I'm
6:02 about to show you will submit the
6:04 pattern of the video into their brain so
6:06 you have to set the right expectation
6:09 for the pacing tone and style 99% of
6:10 YouTubers think that you need to have a
6:12 fast video in fact I blew up Joel
6:14 kaplan's YouTube channel from 6,000 to
6:18 24,000 subscribers making videos like
6:19 this it simply comes down to creating
6:21 the right expectation if you tell the
6:23 viewer that the rest of the video is
6:25 going to be slow and then you give them
6:27 the reasons behind it your avd is going
6:29 to be way higher than if you said
6:31 nothing because if a viewer just HPS
6:33 onto a slow video that they weren't
6:34 expecting to be slow they're going to
6:36 leave for example with Joel's videos we
6:39 always say this sit back relax and let's
6:41 dive in now the viewer expects a slower
6:44 more valuable video alternatively if you
6:46 have faster videos like me then you
6:47 could say something like in the next 10
6:49 minutes I'm going to show you exactly
6:50 how to start a YouTube channel from
6:53 scratch implying you have a faster video
6:55 and the last thing that you need to
6:57 write a perfect intro is establishing
6:59 your Singularity I do this with social
7:00 proof or simply restating my mission to
7:03 take 1,000 YouTubers to over 100,000
7:05 subscribers completely for free in fact
7:07 I even have a free YouTube course coming
7:09 out on January 1st that's better than
7:11 most YouTubers paid stuff so subscribe
7:13 to see that now that we have a perfect
7:14 intro we need to make sure the body of
7:16 the video is structured properly I'm not
7:17 here to waste your time so here's a
7:19 screen recording of my current framework
7:21 that I'm using to write this video feel
7:22 free to copy it word for word the key
7:24 thing here is having both payoffs and
7:26 open Loops in your video open Loops
7:27 raise the questions and payoffs answer
7:29 them because like I said the viewer gets
7:31 a big hit of dopamine each time a loop
7:32 is closed so you want to close at least
7:34 four to five Loops in each video so that
7:36 the viewer stays satisfied the final
7:38 part of our script is the CTA or call to
7:40 action which simply means telling the
7:42 viewer what to do next my call to action
7:44 is always just watch the next video on
7:45 my channel and I recently found a
7:48 framework by George Blackman Ali abdall
7:49 script writer that has taken my Inc
7:51 screen clickthrough rate from this to
7:54 this that means that for every 100,000
7:55 views on my channel I'm getting an extra
7:58 8,000 by changing just one thing and
8:00 trust me these these little changes make
8:02 all of the difference in your YouTube
8:04 growth the framework looks like this
8:07 link curiosity Gap and CTA promise
8:09 linking would be connecting your CTA to
8:11 the end of your video The Curiosity Gap
8:13 would be opening a loop in the viewers
8:15 mind that they want answered the CTA
8:16 promise would be telling the viewer what
8:19 to do and why doing that thing will
8:20 close the loop in their head it's
8:22 actually genius it's gotten me tens of
8:23 thousands of views for free and
8:25 altogether it looks something like this
8:26 so now that you know how to both make a
8:29 viewer click and stay on your video you
8:30 need to learn how to come up with ideas
8:32 that are actually worthy of going viral
8:34 and there's an ideation strategy that
8:36 I've been doing recently that's had a
8:38 huge impact on my channel so check out
8:39 this video where I show you what it is
8:41 and how you can use it to guarantee your
8:43 next video goes viral thank you and have