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[https://onlinecashkingz.com Make money on YouTube] through video channels? You bet, and more and more savvy video passionista's are making the most of the popular online video site - although new rules make it more difficult for brand-new YouTube entrepreneurs to crack the code and earn some dough.youtube.com YouTube certainly has a huge global audience, with 1.58 billion users, making it the second-most visited online search engine (after Google).youtube.com Every minute, more than 100 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube. YouTube accommodates 75 languages, comprising 95% of the global Internet population. The average YouTube user spends up to 25 minutes a day on the site.


Globally, YouTube visitors watch four billion videos every day. What marketing manager wouldn't love to have that many eyeballs attached to his or brand on a regular basis? That's why there's so much cash to be made on YouTube - and there is no shortage of people looking to take full advantage. How Do YouTubers Make Money? Making money on YouTube requires creativity, grit, and the now-so-easy ability to generate video content that's unique, and that people want to see. 10 per 1,000 viewer engagements, and it's the most common revenue model used to earn money on the social media site.


The goal with any YouTube video upload is to leverage the advertising angle. Basically, YouTube pays the video owner 55% of any ad revenue collected on the video page. Primarily, YouTube channel producers earn ad cash through YouTube AdSense partnership programs. Ads are embedded on a YouTube channel page that (hopefully) generates revenue from channel viewership. If there are ad dollars to share, YouTube grabs 45% and you, the channel producer, earn 55% as your commission. There is no hard and fast way to estimate what you'll earn as a YouTube partner, as experiences on the site differ. For instance, a small ad placed on a YouTube channel in a small town in, say, Argentina, will likely pay out less than a huge advertisement placed by a major U.S. Chicago or San Francisco.


With such variances in play, it's difficult to peg future ad earnings on YouTube. Companies love to attract eyeballs to their brands, and to their products and services. Thus, many businesses sponsor so-called "influencers" to create YouTube videos that promote their products, and pay the influencer for doing so. The obstacle to YouTube sponsorships is this: companies only want to work with influencers with a wide following. Newbie YouTube video producers likely won't qualify for sponsorships, until their videos start attracting 10,000 or more user engagements. Some YouTube video producers earn good money selling gadgets, knick-knacks, shirts, hats and even gift cards to viewers who like what they're seeing on YouTube. This angle isn't easy, but selling merchandise for profit on YouTube does not happen overnight.


Expect to take years to build a following strong enough to keep your video business in the green via merchandise sales. Some video entrepreneurs keep the lights on by having channel viewers donate funds to their video channels. This gambit, too, isn't easy, as viewers are loath to part with their money unless they are wildly passionate - or wildly entertained - by your viewing experience. That's always possible, but if you have that kind of fully-engaged audience, it's much easier to earn the big bucks through advertising or sponsorships. Time for a reality check.youtube.com It's a very good idea to be rational and realistic before going all in as a YouTube video profiteer.


YouTube has also raised the bar for monetizing its video user segment. You need . . A minimum of 1,000 subscribers. A minimum of 4,000 hours of what YouTube refers to as "watch time" on the site. And you must meet both requirements in a single 12-month period. Previously, the minimum monetization baseline was a rather vague requirement of hosting 10,000 public views. With the new requirements, which rolled out in February of 2018, it's going to be much harder for new YouTube video generators to meet those standards, and earn decent cash on the site. Where your viewers reside. The "cost per click" metric that YouTube uses to measure payouts is higher in high-trafficked countries like the U.S. United Kingdom, and less so for lower-tier countries like India or Australia. Age, gender, and income. Different advertising models. YouTube offers various types of ads that offer different payment models.


For example, TrueView and Bumper ads pay on a "per view" basis, while so-called pre-roll advertisements pay on a per-click basis. YouTube video entrepreneurs may also be paid via click-through rates on advertisements included on your channel. Basically, the stronger the click-through rates, the higher the income you'll make. More views matter. Advertisers will obviously tend to place their ads on channels with more subscribers. Consequently, YouTube video makers should make adding subscribers a big priority. Despite the difficulties inherent in making money on YouTube, there are enough success stories on the site to keep plugging away, with the opportunity to make millions, too. 10 million on YouTube.


11 million, with over 10 million viewers. Smosh. Smosh started in 2005, with the dynamic duo of Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla, who hit it big with comedy and parody videos. 11 million. The duo split in in 2017, as Padilla left to start his own YouTube site, which now has over two million viewers. 11.5 million by rolling out comedy views, video blogs, and music videos, attracting 14 million subscribers in the process. Felix Kjellberg, AKA PewDiePie.youtube.com Making millions while playing video games, and talking about those games on YouTube, is the brainchild of PewDiePie. 12 million on his wildly popular YouTube channel.


Mark Fischbach AKA Markiplier. 12 million, like PewDiePie, talking about video games on YouTube. Jake Paul. The brother of Logan Paul, Jake Paul boasts over 17 million subscribers on YouTube. 12.5 million from his YouTube channel. Evan Fong AKA Vanoss Gaming. 15.5 million from his YouTube channel, who also has made his millions creating videos based on video games, boiling down hours of video game play into a single, direct video that resonates with his legion of fans. Daniel Middleton AKA DanTDM. Middleton is a Minecraft millionaire, parlaying his love of the popular video game into a YouTube channel, both reviewing and playing Minecraft on his YouTube channel. 16.5 million doing so.


You can make educated guesses, but without reviewing, analyzing and learning from your metrics, you’re destined for failure. YouTube makes a bunch of videos’ metrics available for channel owners, and if you’re trying to make the most share-worthy content out there, paying attention to your metrics is an absolute necessity. Things like views are important (sort of), but if you really want to focus on your metrics, you should familiarize yourself with everything: comments, likes, dislikes, estimated minutes watched, average view duration, click through rates and viewer percentage.youtube.com Allow those metrics to help you figure out your most popular content, and open-mindedly look for patterns. Look at your most popular videos’ average lengths, the type of content covered, the techniques used and so on.


Once you can figure out why someone liked a video, you can replicate that formula to start making money on YouTube. You need to be able to establish yourself as a voice that people in the communities you’re targeting can trust and rely on for sound advice and commentary. So, if you want to give product reviews or testimonials, you should be able to do so in a way that makes you authoritative and worth listening to. If you want to have a videogame channel, you better be damn good at the games you’re playing. The idea here is that people definitely want creative and fun "hosts," but more than anything, they want someone who they can trust to give them the most accurate, up-to-date and thorough information available. Try to know so goddamn much about what you’re talking about that they simply won’t want to go anywhere else.


Hey man, don’t kill the messenger! The fact is, if people are going to spend three or four minutes of their day staring at someone, they’d rather it be someone they find attractive and personable.youtube.com If you’re looking to cultivate a solid following on YouTube and make that YouTube money, the rules that apply for TV still apply: you need to be visually appealing. Luckily, the rules appear to be a little more lax for YouTube stars. You don’t necessarily have to be obscenely physically attractive or supermodel hot, but when you’re not, you have to be able to keep people watching, sharing and subscribing.