0:01 I spent the last week analyzing
0:03 psychology channels that are blowing up
0:07 right now. Over 60,000 subscribers in 1
0:09 month with just 21 videos. And just take
0:11 a look at the Vid IQ dashboard for their
0:14 estimated earnings. This other channel,
0:17 over 70,000 subscribers in 4 months. And
0:19 here's what I noticed. It's not the
0:20 content that makes them stand out, it's
0:23 the branding. Every thumbnail uses the
0:25 same two to three colors. Every visual
0:27 follows the same style. The second you
0:29 see their content on your feed, you know
0:31 it's them. That's the difference between
0:33 channels that grow and channels that
0:34 stay stuck. So, I did something
0:36 different. Instead of just explaining
0:38 how these channels work, I reverse
0:39 engineered them, broke down their
0:41 branding system, their color schemes,
0:43 their visual identity, everything that
0:46 makes them instantly recognizable. Then,
0:48 I built my own psychology channel using
0:50 that exact system. And in this video,
0:52 I'm walking you through the entire
0:54 process from channel setup to scripting
0:57 to production to final upload. And if
0:58 you're new here, I break down systems
1:00 like this every week to help creators
1:03 build scalable faceless channels. Also,
1:05 if you're seeing this on my personal
1:08 channel, that's intentional. Bigs Media
1:10 is on a short 14-day pause, so
1:12 everything's running through here to
1:14 keep momentum and keep delivering the
1:15 systems you're here for. All right,
1:17 let's get back into it. After working
1:19 behind the scenes on million sub
1:21 channels, one thing became obvious.
1:23 Growth doesn't come from having the best
1:24 information. It comes from having the
1:27 clearest identity. And psychology is the
1:28 perfect niche for that. Because people
1:30 aren't searching for more facts. They're
1:32 searching for explanations that make
1:34 their own behavior make sense. That's
1:36 why the difference between a channel
1:38 that gets 500 views and one that gets
1:41 500,000 isn't the script, it's the
1:43 packaging. Most psychology channels feel
1:45 like lectures or motivational clips. The
1:47 ones that blow up, you can recognize
1:49 them in a single second. Same colors,
1:52 same style, same rhythm. And with AI,
1:54 creating that kind of consistency is
1:56 easier than ever. Once I broke down
1:57 their workflow, I realized the growth
2:00 wasn't coming from fancy animations. It
2:02 was coming from repeatable structure.
2:03 And once you understand that structure,
2:05 you can create these videos in under 2
2:08 hours. Let me show you what these videos
2:10 actually look like and what we will be
2:12 creating. Most people aren't trapped in
2:13 a job. They're trapped in their own
2:16 mind. And in the next 20 seconds, I'm
2:18 going to show you exactly how your brain
2:20 is sabotaging your entire career
2:23 trajectory. This isn't just about a job.
2:24 It's about how your mind manufactures
2:26 invisible chains that keep you paralyzed.
2:27 paralyzed.
2:31 Label comfort cage. Your brain is wired
2:33 to fear losing what you have more than
2:35 gaining something better. That's what
2:37 we're building today. And to make this
2:39 process plugandplay, I put together a
2:41 dock where I reverse engineered two of
2:43 the fastest growing psychology channels.
2:45 Inside this doc, everything, their
2:48 branding system, color schemes, visual
2:50 style, production workflow, all broken
2:52 down so you can replicate what's working
2:54 without copying them directly. Links in
2:56 the description and the tools we are
2:58 using are all free. Chat GPT, Claude,
3:01 Whisk, 11 Labs, or any other free
3:03 voiceover tool and Cap Cut. That's it.
3:05 All right. First step, building your
3:06 channel identity. And what separates
3:08 successful psychology channels from
3:11 random ones is consistent branding. Go
3:12 to the prompt dock. Copy the first
3:14 prompt. the channel identity prompt.
3:17 Paste it into chat GPT. Hit enter. It'll
3:18 give you branding options, color
3:20 combinations, channel descriptions,
3:22 channel names. Pick the one that feels
3:25 right. I chose Know Your Mind as my
3:27 channel name. Now, whoever's first into
3:28 taking action on this could literally
3:31 take the info in the second tab and copy
3:33 my video. Just kidding. Don't be lazy.
3:35 Anyway, now that you have your brand
3:36 identity, let's create your channel
3:39 profile picture and banner. Copy the
3:40 profile picture prompt. Paste it into
3:43 chat GPT. Insert your channel info into
3:45 the placeholders and hit enter. As you
3:47 can see, inside views prompts are JSON
3:49 beta. This allows us to replicate our
3:52 competitor style down to the tea. Do the
3:53 same for the banner. Grab the banner
3:56 prompt. Go to chatgpt, paste it in.
3:57 Insert your channel info into the
4:00 placeholders and hit enter. Now, once we
4:01 have our two prompts, let's head over to
4:04 Whisk to create our profile picture and
4:06 banner image. Grab your profile picture
4:08 prompt, paste it into Wisk. Make sure
4:11 the aspect ratio is 1 one and hit enter.
4:12 Download the one you prefer out of the
4:14 two or regenerate if you're not
4:16 satisfied. Let's do the same for the
4:18 banner image. Grab the prompt, paste it
4:20 into Whisk. Make sure the aspect ratio
4:23 is 16 to9. Hit enter. Now go ahead and
4:25 set up your channel. I've already gone
4:26 through this process before, so check
4:29 out earlier videos. Now, let's begin
4:31 producing our first video. Head over to
4:33 the topic prompt in the doc. Copy it and
4:36 paste it into chat GPT. Then hit enter.
4:38 Select which video idea you want to go
4:40 with and save it somewhere. I'll be
4:43 going with video idea number 18. Before
4:45 we move on to scripting, we want to get
4:46 an idea of what our thumbnail is going
4:48 to look like. So, you'll want to find a
4:50 thumbnail concept you're going to use
4:52 instead of doing it at the end. So,
4:54 scroll through your competitors, find
4:56 which video idea seems the most similar
4:58 to your own, and grab their thumbnail.
5:00 We'll be using it later to finalize our
5:02 packaging. Now that we've locked in the
5:04 topic, title, and thumbnail direction,
5:06 it's time to script the video. I'm using
5:09 Claude for this. It's clean, fast, and
5:11 way better at handling structure than
5:13 Chat GPT for long- form content. Head
5:15 over to Claude, copy the scripting
5:17 prompt from the doc, paste it in, and
5:18 drop your video details into the
5:20 placeholders. The prompt is designed to
5:22 pull the best elements from the top
5:24 psychology channels, pacing, hook,
5:27 style, delivery, rhythm without copying
5:29 any of them directly. It gives you a
5:30 script that feels original but still
5:33 aligned with what performs. These videos
5:35 will be short just like our competitors.
5:37 Anywhere between two and 6 minutes is
5:39 perfect. Now that we have our script,
5:41 let's begin producing our image prompts.
5:44 Head back over to chat GPT and paste in
5:46 your finalized script. Then head back to
5:48 the prompt dock and copy the image
5:50 prompt and paste it in and hit enter.
5:52 Now that we have our image prompts,
5:54 let's head back to Whisk to create the
5:56 images. Paste in the prompt. Make sure
5:58 the background of the images is green.
6:00 This is important since we want to
6:01 remove the background from these images
6:04 later in editing. Do this for every one
6:06 of your image crops. As your images are
6:08 being generated, let's begin producing
6:10 our voice over. Head over to any
6:12 voiceover software of your choosing.
6:14 I'll be using 11 Labs and the voice I'm
6:16 choosing is Chris. Paste in your script
6:18 and format it. Remove anything you don't
6:20 want included in the voice over. Hit
6:22 generate. Listen to the voiceovers.
6:24 Download the one you prefer the most.
6:26 Now head back over to Whisk and download
6:28 the images you want included in your
6:30 video. Now it's time to bring everything
6:32 together with Cap Cut editing. For this
6:35 will be quite simple. Upload all your
6:37 voice overs and images and drag your
6:39 voice over into the timeline. If you
6:40 feel you need to increase the speed of
6:43 the voice over, feel free to do so. Now
6:45 drag in your images as well and align
6:46 them so that the scenes are being
6:48 depicted by the images. And to remove
6:51 the green background, click the image,
6:53 select chroma picker, highlight the
6:55 green background, and do the same thing
6:57 for every single image. Now, our
6:59 competitors usually have a white
7:00 background for their videos, but I want
7:03 mine to feel more branded to my channel.
7:05 So, I'll be going with a red background.
7:07 To do that, head over to media, select
7:10 libraryy, drag and drop any vertical
7:12 background, drag the background out of
7:14 the frame, head over to settings, go to
7:16 canvas, click it, select color, and
7:18 choose any color you'd like. Now, let's
7:20 add transitions. All we'll be using and
7:23 what our competitors use are slide ups
7:26 as in transitions and fade outs as out
7:28 transitions. Apply that to every one of
7:30 your image scenes. Now, all that's next
7:32 are the captions. Head over to the top
7:35 left where it says text selected. Scroll
7:37 down and select the auto captions
7:38 feature. Make sure the captions are
7:41 aligned and shown throughout each scene
7:43 and design the style of the captions and
7:45 make sure they're visible and easy to
7:47 read. Once everything looks good, hit
7:49 export. All that's next is finalizing
7:51 the packaging. This should only take 5
7:53 minutes since we completed most of it at
7:55 the beginning. Head back over to the
7:57 image to JSON GPT and paste in your
7:59 competitor's thumbnail. The data that I
8:01 converted is in the prompt dock if you
8:03 need it. So, take that JSON data and
8:05 paste it into the conversation where we
8:07 did all of our production. Paste in the
8:09 thumbnail prompt and input your video
8:11 info into the placeholders and hit
8:13 enter. Now, grab the prompt that chat
8:15 GPT gave you and head back over to Whisk
8:18 and insert the prompt and hit enter.
8:20 Download the thumbnail you like best or
8:21 regenerate it. And now, you're almost
8:23 done. All that is left is the
8:25 description. Go back to the prompt dock
8:27 and grab the final prompt and insert it
8:30 into chat GPT alongside your video
8:32 information and hit enter. Boom. We're
8:34 all finished. Now just upload it and
8:36 stay consistent to see actual growth. If
8:38 you're building a channel right now,
8:40 especially in a niche where retention is
8:42 everything, the worst mistake you can
8:44 make is building in isolation because
8:46 you don't feel the bottlenecks until
8:47 it's too late. You'll spend weeks
8:49 uploading videos wondering why you're
8:52 stuck at 200 views. And the answer isn't
8:54 more content. It's knowing which part of
8:56 your system is flawed. Is it your hook,
8:58 your pacing, your packaging, your
9:01 positioning? Going into 2026, niches
9:03 like psychology get some of the highest
9:05 attention of the year. Self-improvement
9:07 content spikes. People are reflecting,
9:09 setting goals, looking for frameworks.
9:12 If you dial your system in now, the next
9:13 60 days can look different and
9:15 everything can change. The creators
9:18 inside Creator OS aren't guessing which
9:20 variable to fix. They're seeing what
9:21 actually moves the needle in real time,
9:23 what breaks retention, what converts
9:26 clicks, what scales without burning out.
9:27 That's the difference between hoping
9:29 your channel grows and knowing why it
9:32 does. Creator OS is an ecosystem filled
9:34 with creators who actually build and
9:36 share what's working right now. First
9:38 link in the description or pinned
9:39 comment if that sounds like you. Thanks
9:41 for watching and I'll see you in the next