• Do You Really Need to Post at the “Best Time”? (Scheduling Strategy)
    2025/08/27

    Is there a “magic hour” to upload? We unpack the research on posting times, the consistency-first counter-argument, and a practical way to find your best window. You’ll learn how to read the When your viewers are on YouTube heat map, why posting just before peaks helps, and why content quality, thumbnails, SEO, and retention outweigh perfect timing—especially for new channels.

    What You’ll Learn

    • What studies and gurus say about best times vs. why many pros say consistency wins
    • How to use YouTube Studio → Audience heat map to pick a posting window
    • Why posting just before audience peaks can help initial distribution
    • The role of evergreen shelf life (timing ≠ destiny)
    • Retention targets for shorts vs. long-form, and where timing fits in the bigger picture

    Chapters

    • 00:00– Setup
    • 00:37– Research & time windows
    • 02:28– Counterpoint
    • 03:13– Proof stories
    • 03:31– Shelf life
    • 04:09– Find your window
    • 04:46– No data yet?
    • 05:06– Timing is the cherry on top
    • 05:36– Retention signals

    Key Takeaways

    • There are popular windows, but consistency and content beat the clock.
    • Use your own audience data to pick a slot; post just before peaks.
    • Evergreen shelf life means great videos can win long after upload day.
    • Retention + CTR are stronger growth levers than minute-perfect timing.
    • Start simple, measure, then optimize—timing is the finishing touch, not the foundation.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • YouTube Studio → Analytics → Audience (heat map)

    Sponsor

    Brought to you by Pop by Tuulie—psychology-driven thumbnails and title testing. Create with Pixel, improve with Re-pop, model styles with Inspo Pop, then test in Pop Ground to see what actually pops. Start your free trial at tuulie.com/pop.

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    8 分
  • The Algorithm-Friendly Upload Checklist (Small Tweaks, Big Reach)
    2025/08/27

    This episode turns post-upload busywork into a repeatable growth checklist. You’ll learn how small optimizations—keyworded filenames, description tops, manual chapters, smart titles/thumbnails, and internal linking—send stronger signals to YouTube and create a better viewer journey. Stack these 1% improvements consistently and they compound into meaningful reach and watch-time gains.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why tiny, consistent optimizations can compound into big results
    • Before upload: how to name your video & thumbnail files for relevance
    • Tags vs. descriptions: where to spend time today
    • Titles & thumbnails: short, emotional titles; baseline first, then A/B
    • Manual chapters: turn long videos into multiple search entry points
    • Internal linking: playlists, end screens, cards, pinned comments (+ unlisted trick)

    Chapters

    • 00:00– What this checklist does
    • 00:42– Compounding effect
    • 01:06– Overlooked steps
    • 01:24– File naming
    • 02:02– Tags today
    • 02:29– Descriptions matter
    • 03:12– Go long
    • 03:48– Titles & thumbnails
    • 04:12– Testing cadence
    • 04:27– Manual chapters
    • 05:12– Keep viewers
    • 05:16– Internal links (4 spots)
    • 05:56– Unlisted trick
    • 06:21– It’s for viewers, too
    • 06:54– Choose one item

    Key Takeaways

    • YouTube reads filenames, descriptions, chapters—use them to clarify intent.
    • Short, strong titles + clear thumbnails win the first impression.
    • Manual chapters create multiple search doorways (and help viewers).
    • Internal linking engineers a binge path on your channel.
    • Stack small wins consistently—they compound.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • YouTube Studio (defaults, chapters, A/B testing capabilities)

    Sponsor

    Brought to you by Pop by Tuulie—psychology-driven thumbnails and title testing. Create with Pixel, improve with Re-pop, model styles with Inspo Pop, then test in Pop Ground to see what actually pops. Start your free trial at tuulie.com/pop.

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    8 分
  • How to Find Keywords Your Audience Is Actually Searching For
    2025/08/27

    Stop guessing. In this deep dive, we show free, fast ways to uncover what your audience types into YouTube: Auto-suggest, the Alphabet method, a wildcard underscore trick, and the Two-More-Clicks method. Then we turn those findings into keyword-first titles, description tops that convert, spoken keywords YouTube can transcribe, and chapters that rank—plus a long-tail strategy built for smaller channels.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Free keyword discovery with YouTube itself (auto-suggest, alphabet, wildcard)
    • The Two-More-Clicks method to mine related queries from results pages
    • How to think like a beginner and target long-tail questions
    • Tools to check volume/competition/trends (vidIQ, TubeBuddy, Keywords Everywhere)
    • Where to place keywords: title, first two description lines, spoken words, chapters
    • Why tags are minimal now (use for misspellings/homonyms)

    Chapters

    • 00:00– Why keyword research matters
    • 00:27– Where to start
    • 00:43– YouTube Auto-Suggest
    • 01:06– Alphabet Method
    • 01:25– Wildcard Underscore
    • 01:37– Two-More-Clicks
    • 01:57– Read the page
    • 02:49– Think like a beginner
    • 03:12– Long-tail wins
    • 03:35– Low-volume strategy
    • 04:07– Tools
    • 04:50– Deploying keywords
    • 05:23– Inside the video
    • 05:52– Chapters
    • 05:57– Tags today

    Key Takeaways

    • YouTube itself is your best free keyword tool.
    • Long-tail > broad for smaller channels—win specific searches first.
    • Place keywords where they matter: title, description top, voice, chapters.
    • Tags are optional helpers, not a growth lever.
    • Create with the beginner’s language, not expert jargon.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • YouTube Auto-Suggest (search bar), Related/People also watched
    • vidIQ, TubeBuddy (volume/competition ideas)
    • Keywords Everywhere (volume, trendlines, top-video age/averages)

    Sponsor

    Brought to you by Pop by Tuulie—psychology-driven thumbnails and title testing. Create with Pixel, improve with Re-pop, model styles with Inspo Pop, then test in Pop Ground to see what actually pops. Start your free trial at tuulie.com/pop.

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    8 分
  • YouTube SEO Basics: Tags, Titles, and Descriptions That Work
    2025/08/27

    Confused by YouTube SEO? This deep dive gives you a simple, actionable system: write concise, keyword-led titles (start with the exact query, ~50–70 characters), craft descriptions with a strong first two lines (keyword + CTA/link), and treat tags as optional helpers (misspellings/homonyms). Add chapters, related links, and defaults in Studio. Rank for search and win the click.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why titles are the top SEO signal—and how to write them for algorithms + humans
    • How to structure descriptions (first 2 lines + 100–300 words + chapters + links)
    • The real role of tags now (minimal; use for edge cases)
    • Practical templates, examples, and a quick SEO checklist you can ship today

    Chapters

    • 00:00 — Intro & goal
    • 00:22– Work with the algo
    • 00:47 — Title priorities
    • 01:12 — Keyword placement
    • 01:32– Human appeal
    • 03:13– Descriptions matter
    • 03:34 — Above-the-fold recipe
    • 04:00– Below-the-fold
    • 04:27 Utility add-ons
    • 04:44– Tags today
    • 05:24– Practical use
    • 06:04– Beyond SEO

    Key Takeaways

    • Put the exact main keyword first (or near-first) in the title; keep titles ~50–70 characters to avoid truncation.
    • Use brackets/clarifiers for humans (e.g., [Full Tutorial], [2025 Update]) to lift CTR without diluting relevance.
    • Description top two lines matter most: restate the keyword + a clear benefit + primary CTA/link.
    • Write 100–300+ words below the fold using related terms naturally (no stuffing); include chapters with timestamps.
    • Tags have minimal impact now; use them mainly for misspellings/homonyms and quick variants—don’t overinvest time.
    • Match query intent: be direct and specific; precision beats broad phrasing for search discovery.
    • Consistency tools: set description defaults (links/disclosures) and reuse a keyword-first title template for speed.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • YouTube Studio (descriptions, chapters, defaults)
    • vidIQ (related keyword ideas)
    • RapidTags.io, TubeBuddy (tags; light tracking)

    Sponsor

    Brought to you by Pop by Tuulie—psychology-driven thumbnails and title testing. Create with Pixel, improve with Re-pop, model styles with Inspo Pop, then test in Pop Ground. Start your free trial at tuulie.com/pop.

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    7 分
  • The Secret to Making Thumbnails People Can’t Ignore
    2025/08/27

    Thumbnails aren’t decoration—they’re the deciding moment. In this deep dive, we break down the 3-step click psychology (thumbnail → title → thumbnail), show why top creators plan thumbnails before filming, and share the elements that stop the scroll: curiosity gaps, expressive faces, big numbers, and high contrast. You’ll get a simple 3-element design rule, the rise of “unthumbnails”, and a testing playbook to iterate fast.

    What You’ll Learn

    • The thumbnail → title → thumbnail decision loop (how viewers actually click)
    • Why many pros concept thumbnails weeks before filming
    • How to craft a curiosity gap without clickbait
    • Visuals that pop: faces, numbers, contrast, recognizable UI
    • The 3-element rule for clean, legible design on mobile
    • Unthumbnails” (authentic, lightly edited images) and when they outperform
    • A practical test–swap–optimize workflow (A/B testing & backups)

    Chapters

    • [00:00] — Why thumbnails matter
    • [00:32] — Psychology of the click
    • [00:40]— Impact story
    • [01:20] — 3-step click flow
    • [02:15] — Pro workflow
    • [03:20] — Curiosity gap defined
    • [03:44] — Scroll-stoppers
    • [04:15] — Keep it simple: ≤3 main elements
    • [04:45] — Edgy vs ethical
    • [05:18] — Authenticity wins
    • [05:56] — Practical tips

    Key Takeaways

    • Viewers decide in ~1–2 seconds; design for that moment.
    • Plan thumbnails first; let content deliver the promised story.
    • Use faces, numbers, and contrast to stop the scroll.
    • Keep designs simple and phone-legible.
    • Test relentlessly; swap underperformers; keep learning from results.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • Pop by Tuulie: AI-generate thumbnails - create, tweak, model & test — tuulie.com/pop
    • YouTube thumbnail A/B testing; third-party tools (e.g., ClickPilot app)

    Sponsor

    Brought to you by Pop by Tuulie—psychology-driven thumbnails and title testing. Create with Pixel, improve with Re-pop, model styles with Inspo Pop, then test in Pop Ground to see what actually pops. Start your free trial at tuulie.com/pop.

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    8 分
  • How to Write YouTube Titles That Get Clicks
    2025/08/27

    Today we break down the title-first approach to YouTube. You’ll learn how to plan titles before filming, use open loops and power words, keep titles short (≈≤55 characters), and match style to browse vs. search intent. We also cover the chocolate-covered carrot framing and a simple post-publish retitling and measurement loop to lift CTR fast.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why title + thumbnail = the product viewers buy with a click
    • How curiosity, desire, and fear affect clicks (and how to use them ethically)
    • Open loop patterns that spark curiosity without clickbait
    • Browse vs. search title styles and when to use each
    • Practical rules: 5th-grade clarity, ≤55 characters, front-load the hook
    • A write-test-retitle workflow using analytics (CTR, impressions)

    Chapters

    • 00:00 — The stakes
    • 00:49 — Title-first mindset
    • 01:26 — Open loops 101
    • 02:04 — Emotion drivers + ‘chocolate-covered carrot’
    • 03:17 — Model what works
    • 03:46 — Clarity & brevity
    • 04:16 — Front-load & power words
    • 04:55 — Browse vs. search
    • 05:14 — Iterate to win

    Key Takeaways

    • Treat title + thumbnail as the product.
    • Keep titles short, clear, and front-loaded.
    • Use open loops and benefits, not just topics.
    • Match browse vs search intent.
    • Retitle after publishing based on CTR and impressions.

    Resources & Tools Mentioned

    • Pop by Tuulie: Create, tweak, model and test YouTube thumbnails (generated by AI) — start a free trial at http://tuulie.com/pop
    • YouTube Studio for CTR, impressions, retention

    FAQ

    What’s the ideal YouTube title length? Aim for ≈≤55 characters so mobile doesn’t cut off your hook.

    Are open loops clickbait? They’re fine if you fulfill the promise quickly—tease, don’t deceive.

    Should I change a title after publishing? Yes. Watch CTR & impressions over 24–72 hours; retitle if weak.

    How many titles should I draft? Write 5–10 variants; shortlist 2; design matching thumbnails.

    Browse vs. search—how do I choose? Feed traffic → emotional/curious; Query traffic → clear/keyworded.

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    7 分