FamilyToyReview
Posting Mad!
I am not there yet. My channel only has 1,000 subs in the kid toys category. I've wondered why other channels have been more successful even though we have similar content.
Youtube tells you to do multiple things like have good quality video, improve retention rate, total minutes, good titles, engage with viewers, etc etc. And I've been doing most of the stuff but have neglected some. And that was my problem, I think you need to follow an "all of the above" strategy because all of the suggested guidelines are important for specific reasons. I realized I've made a very critical error in neglecting one area.
I bet YouTube uses click to rates to help sort their "suggested video" section. Even if I have a great video with highly relevant content and very good retention rate, it is just wasting real estate space in the #1 or 2 spot on the "suggested video" section if the click to rate is very poor. Why would Youtube even keep my video in that spot if the thumbnail is very poor and barely anyone is clicking on it. They would be better off displaying another video with a higher click to rate, which would help extend the overall session view time.
I haven't found any source directly telling us that impressions and click to rates are used as part of YouTube's algorithm. But those are basic standard metrics for online advertising or displaying products. So of course click to rates must have some value. They don't tell us directly, maybe to prevent abuse and excessive click baiting. But they do tell us indirectly by recommending good titles, descriptions, and thumbnails which are basically key to improving your video's click to rate.
I could be wrong. YouTube doesn't provide us impressions information in our reports. But they must be using that data.
Youtube tells you to do multiple things like have good quality video, improve retention rate, total minutes, good titles, engage with viewers, etc etc. And I've been doing most of the stuff but have neglected some. And that was my problem, I think you need to follow an "all of the above" strategy because all of the suggested guidelines are important for specific reasons. I realized I've made a very critical error in neglecting one area.
I bet YouTube uses click to rates to help sort their "suggested video" section. Even if I have a great video with highly relevant content and very good retention rate, it is just wasting real estate space in the #1 or 2 spot on the "suggested video" section if the click to rate is very poor. Why would Youtube even keep my video in that spot if the thumbnail is very poor and barely anyone is clicking on it. They would be better off displaying another video with a higher click to rate, which would help extend the overall session view time.
I haven't found any source directly telling us that impressions and click to rates are used as part of YouTube's algorithm. But those are basic standard metrics for online advertising or displaying products. So of course click to rates must have some value. They don't tell us directly, maybe to prevent abuse and excessive click baiting. But they do tell us indirectly by recommending good titles, descriptions, and thumbnails which are basically key to improving your video's click to rate.
I could be wrong. YouTube doesn't provide us impressions information in our reports. But they must be using that data.
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