『The Vubli Podcast』のカバーアート

The Vubli Podcast

The Vubli Podcast

著者: Gideon Shalwick
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概要

Deep conversations with world-class short form video creators creators, founders, and industry experts about short-form video, content distribution, growing influence, and building a standout personal brand. Each episode uncovers proven strategies to grow faster on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook Reels, and more. New episodes weekly.

© 2026 The Vubli Podcast
マーケティング マーケティング・セールス 経済学
エピソード
  • Viral Short Form Video Playbooks with Jordana Grace - EP10
    2026/02/08

    Quick Intro

    Jordana Grace (Jordy) shares how she built viral short form video content by making videos that are simple, repeatable, and highly interactive.

    You will hear why her “tiny door” clip hit 7.6M views, how she found a repeatable video format, and how she thinks about short form video monetization in Australia.

    Episode in a Nutshell

    Jordana explains that her growth came from trial and error, then locking in a repeatable hook: “things they should tell you before coming to Australia.”

    She breaks down why comments are the real engine of viral short form video content, how to find a repeatable video format fast using TikTok search, and why “easy to make” beats “perfect.”

    She also shares practical consistency tips for busy creators (including new mums), plus how she makes money through brand deals and why Facebook can be a consistent payout channel (as an Australian creator).

    Timestamps

    00:00 - The 7.6M “tiny door” video and why puzzles trigger comments
    00:00 - Why she started “things they should tell you before coming to Australia”
    00:45 - The accidental start during COVID lockdown in Queensland
    01:49 - Early “Australia shock” observations (servo, bottle-o, etc.)
    02:10 - The Kmart video that kicked off major sharing
    03:09 - What failed first: sketches, workflow mistakes, watermarks
    04:03 - The repeatable hook that worked (parts 1-5) and why it scaled
    06:29 - How she learned what works: stats + comments + watching other creators
    09:04 - Perfectionism advice: your first video will suck, start anyway
    11:44 - Keyword testing inside the hook (coming vs traveling vs living vs moving)
    12:34 - Going off-niche and still going viral: the “desk door” story
    15:13 - Choosing formats that are sustainable (time, travel, effort)
    19:57 - The test for any repeatable video format: can you do it without burnout?
    21:45 - Consistency as a busy mum: short clips, car filming, low-pressure setup
    26:03 - Rapid-fire segment: why videos go viral (or not), and which platform is easiest
    30:12 - How to find a repeatable format fast using TikTok search
    33:03 - Short form video monetization: Facebook, YouTube, brand partnerships
    36:15 - How to land brand deals: list brands, DM scripts, engagement matters, numbers game
    38:01 - Final advice: claim your handle everywhere, repost, and interact daily
    39:42 - Where to find Jordana: “THE Jordanna Grace” across platforms (linktree mentioned)

    Key Takeaways

    - Viral short form video content often wins because it invites people to comment and solve something.
    - A repeatable hook makes growth easier because the audience knows what they are getting.
    - If a format is hard to produce, you will burn out - build a repeatable video format that fits your real life.
    - Use comments as prompts: reply with new videos and let the audience steer topics.
    - “Perfect” is not required - simple, human, and clear beats polished.
    - TikTok can be used like a search engine to spot what people already want to watch.
    - Jordana says TikTok is easiest to go viral on, but her Instagram works well due to a consistent audience.
    - For making money, she says brand deals pay best, while Facebook can pay more consistently (for her, as an Australian creator).
    - Brand deals are a numbers game: message many brands, expect a small hit rate, and lead with authenticity.

    Resources

    - Jordana Grace | https://linktr.ee/thejordanagrace
    - Jordana on TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@thejordanagrace
    - Vubli | Mentioned in the outro as the tool to post everywhere | https://vubli.ai

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    41 分
  • Systemized Personal Brands with Jemimah Ashleigh - EP9
    2026/02/01

    🔥 Quick Intro

    Building a personal brand in 2026 is not optional - but staying consistent is the real battle.

    Jemimah Ashleigh breaks down how to build a personal brand system that runs like a sausage factory: clear pillars, an evergreen content strategy, batch recording, and a simple workflow your team can execute.

    👉 Episode in a Nutshell

    Jemimah explains why personal brand credibility helps you stand out, win business, and get featured - and why visibility also brings criticism and pressure.

    She shares her shift from a high-security role in the Australian Federal Police to becoming highly visible online, and how systems thinking powered that change.

    The core: define what you stand for, choose content pillars, plan six months at a time, batch film, outsource editing and posting, and repeat what works.

    Collaboration and community compound growth - but only if you are clear, kind, and easy to work with.

    ⏰ Timestamps

    00:00 - Why consistency needs a system
    00:01 - Why personal branding is no longer optional (and the downsides of visibility)
    00:03 - Pick what you want to be known for (stop trying to be expert in everything)
    00:05 - From AFP and national security to personal brand visibility
    00:14 - The personal brand system: foundations, story, pillars, visuals, platforms, posting cadence
    00:19 - Evergreen content strategy: 6-month planning day, pillars, repetition, “people forget in 42 days” (verify)
    00:21 - Batch recording and why repeating posts is mandatory (only 6% see a post) (verify)
    00:26 - Execution: outsource editing, VA posts daily from a spreadsheet
    00:30 - What to keep in-house: message, titles, thumbnails, metadata (uses ChatGPT)
    00:33 - Collaboration: fastest way to cross-pollinate audiences
    00:37 - How to get bigger collaborators to say yes: be easy, be clear, ask
    00:44 - Community: get people offline, nurture, protect your reputation
    00:46 - Biggest enemy is you: imposter syndrome, playing it safe, inconsistency

    💡 Key Takeaways

    - Personal brand credibility helps you stand out in a saturated media world
    - Visibility is a double-edged sword - recognition, criticism, and constant demand come with it
    - Decide what you stand for and what you want people to say when they hear your name
    - Build clear content pillars and assign them to days so posting becomes automatic
    - Plan an evergreen content strategy in one day, then batch film in one day
    - Repeat your best content on a schedule - most people will not notice, and most never saw it
    - Outsource editing and posting so consistency is not tied to your mood
    - Keep your core messaging and positioning in-house if your team cannot see the full strategy
    - Collaboration grows audiences fast when values align and the ask is specific
    - Community grows when you are kind, consistent, and easy to refer in rooms you are not in
    - The biggest blocker is imposter syndrome - use process to get out of your own way

    🔗 Resources

    - Jemimah Ashleigh | Guest website | https://jemimahashleigh.com
    - Upwork | VA hiring platform mentioned | https://www.upwork.com
    - CapCut | Editing tool mentioned | https://www.capcut.com
    - Vubli | Mentioned at the end of the episode | https://vubli.ai

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    50 分
  • Viral video formats with Conar Fair - EP8
    2026/01/25

    🔥 Quick Intro

    Finding the right viral video format for your short form videos is not luck - it is structure. Conar Fair breaks down the short-form viral video formula he used to generate millions of views, then shows how creators can repeat it in any niche.

    👉 Episode in a Nutshell

    Conar Fair shares the behind-the-scenes of building repeatable viral formats for short-form content.

    He explains why watch time drives distribution, why high production does not matter, and how a simple hook-value-payoff structure can lift retention.

    You will hear the five viral video formats (challenge, education, storytelling, wait-for-it, skits and bits), plus real case studies - including a beginner creator in his 60s who built a following by repeating one “stranger challenge” video format.

    If you want a repeatable short-form content system, this is the playbook.

    ⏰ Timestamps

    00:00 - Tesla “Honest Ads” hits 12M views across platforms and proves a repeatable system
    01:04 - Jerry Carey case study: first TikTok nearly 4M views using a “Stranger Challenge” format
    05:11 - Conar’s path: farm community to paid social media creator
    09:36 - 2020 reset: losing $250k-$300k in contracts and doing 30 ads in 30 days
    12:27 - Big lesson: 150k views on a spec ad vs 1M views from a 5-minute TikTok BTS clip
    16:26 - Fastest path today: confidence on camera plus reps
    18:49 - Anatomy of a viral video: hook, value/journey, payoff
    20:23 - The hook as an “offer” in an attention marketplace
    21:30 - Five format categories explained by payoff: challenge, education, storytelling, wait-for-it, skits and bits
    31:27 - Serve before you sell: human-to-human content that builds trust first
    33:40 - How to find your winning format: pick one, run it 5 times, then review retention
    37:06 - Free viral guide and “200 view jail” roadmap mentioned

    💡 Key Takeaways

    - Viral video format starts with payoff - decide the ending first, then build the hook as the promise.
    - The short-form viral video formula is hook, value/journey, payoff - break this and retention collapses.
    - Watch time is the key metric - it rewards creators even with zero followers.
    - High production is optional - structure and stakes beat gear.
    - Challenge format is highly repeatable because it creates tension and a clear winner/loser payoff.
    - The five viral video formats are defined by payoff: challenge, education, storytelling, wait-for-it, skits and bits.
    - Serve before you sell - build trust with entertainment or education before asking for a conversion.
    - Test one format at least five times - do not quit after one post; use retention data to iterate.
    - Consistency compounds - repeating a proven short-form content system can change outcomes fast.

    🔗 Resources

    - Viral Guide | Free guide mentioned in the episode | viral.guide

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    41 分
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