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.