If you get the gateway right, traction will follow.
Set up your Channel with these 3 essential components:
A. Channel Name:
Your YouTube channel name should give the audience an idea of what your channel is about.
Example #1: If you have a recipe channel, it is advisable to suffix terms like “Recipe”, “Cooking” or “Food” in the channel name so that the audience is inclined to learn more about cooking unfailingly reaches your channel. Your audience might not be able to find you if you simply keep your name as the channel’s name.
Example #2: If you do not have a specific channel genre, then you can pick a name that reflects your channel’s values. Here, you have all the eccentric and creative liberty for your channel name. It can be anything but a mediocre name.
Naming a YouTube channel is the same as naming a company. In a company, brand strategists work on getting the brand name and logo, and tagline aligned. Companies pour so much time, art, and tech into deriving their names. Your YouTube channel is your very own company! Then, why not put a little effort into it? Have a channel name that stands out from the crowd.
NameSprint Activity: Search competitor’s channel names. Sit with a pen and paper (or a spreadsheet for the tech-savvy), write down keywords that your channel focuses on covering. Encircle the words that can be mixed. Do the wordplay. Add some millennial terms. Again, mix-and-match. And derive a channel name that can move mountains.
Simply put, you need to have a meaningful channel name that is unique. It will boost your discoverability to the YouTube audience.
B. About Channel:
Does your channel “About” bio even help the YouTube algorithm? Heck yes, it does! The YouTube search crawler crawls your Channel’s “About” section, “Video Titles” “Video Descriptions”, “Video Tags”, and every activity that isn’t anonymous.
Crawling your channel’s “About” section helps YouTube comprehend what your channel is about. YouTube in return favors you by showing your video to the YouTube searchers who are searching for the terms you already have mentioned in your channel About, video title, description, and tags.
But make sure not to stuff keywords! Try writing a lucid and honest channel “About”. Your channel “About” bio can comprise topics that you will be discussing in your videos.
Example #1: If you have a tutorials or tips channel, your “About” section should mention the topic names (episode names if possible), your background which confirms your credibility as a mentor, your story (what propelled you to start this channel) and value proposition (what makes your channel the best).
Write a unique value proposition. Explain why people should watch your video and not your competition’s. Clearly explain the value your audience will get from watching your videos.
In short, make sure you write an informative description that also contains important keywords that reflect your channel’s significance.
C. Channel Email:
When your channel exceeds 10,000 subscribers, product companies, brand sponsors might try to reach out to you for sponsored content. You sure don’t want to miss such an opportunity.
Your channel email is your gateway to networking with your audience and earning through potential brand deals. Thus, make sure to include your email ID as it helps your audience, brands/sponsors approach you. This can tremendously help your small business grow.
YouTube’s channel email features allow you to add more than one email address. So you can add multiple emails just to make sure you don’t miss out on any such opportunities.