When I first started posting vids I did not 'have a channel' per se, I was just posting vids for my family back in the US. So I had no channel name, no intro, no outro, no plan... When YouTube approached me about monetizing I figured 'sure, why not?'. That was when I made a channel name, some channel artwork... and... the dreaded intro. I thought we were supposed to have one. Lots of channels had them.
Over the next few years I adjusted the intro, moved it to an outro, and got rid of it almost entirely. I will show you my experience, and why I dumped the intro. (Your mileage may vary)
My original vids were very short, as I said just showing the new house and neighborhood to my family back in the US. It was not until I started playing with the analytics in the new YT Studio that I started seeing a pattern. Which I think is kind of the point of the analytics. This is one of my first vids. There is no intro, no outro, but look at how smooth that retention line is. I wanted to get back to that. (but I also no longer make 2 minute vids ha ha)
I see everyone asking about SEO, tags, titles, thumbnails etc. Those are great to get ranked in search and get more clicks. But once they click on the vid - are they going to stay? I use the analytics to see patterns of behavior. The intro/outro was a glaring mistake on my part. They would click on my vid, and I would chase them away. That is not generally the best approach ha ha
When I got 'serious' about YT I made a 20 second intro. As many channels do. And look at that initial drop. It is pretty bad. I know I hate watching opening credits, so why would I think others would want to? And 20 seconds is way too long! These vids have a 20 second intro and no outro. You see a big initial drop, a fairly smooth decline, and no much of a crash at the end.
When I saw the horrid drop I decided to cut the intro down from 20 seconds to 3 seconds, and move the intro to an outro. I changed it up but still a 20 second outro? These are a 3 second intro, 20 second outro. As you can see the initial drop is not so bad, the views are pretty smooth, then a big crash at the outro. All I did was make people quit at a different time. Still the lesson I learned is intros and outros are bad for retention.
Then I heard that a hook at the beginning is good to grab their attention. Ok... I shortened my outro, and started using a hook. These are a hook, 3 second intro, 8 second outro.
Finally I gave up on intros and outros. Now I use a hook, most of the time, and no intro or outro.
I still see some initial drop, but not as bad as with a long intro. Also I see a better overall percentage viewed. On the older vids, I think many of the viewers did not skip the long intro - but clicked off the the vid entirely. The spikes are usually due to chapter marks. I would rather they skip ahead, instead of click off the vid. I am also looking at the continuous segment, and trying to learn what they prefer to see. Actually I forgot, I still have a 3 second outro, but my core audience likes it. At a school supply distribution party we have a bunch of kids yelling 'Thank you Tito Tim!'. I could cut that out, but it is only 3 seconds at the end... I do find that when there is a drop, it starts in the last 20 seconds that lines up exactly with the beginning of the End Screens. I am tempted to dump the end screen. I get so few clicks on it, I do not see that it helps me at all.
This has been a 2 year process. By cutting the intro/outro I am seeing a smoother retention line. There are some spikes, but overall it has smoothed out. There is still an initial drop, but not what it was with the long intro. I am also finding that a good hook helps minimize the initial drop. I am working on that...
We need to use the SEO to get clicks, but use the analytics to get the retention.
And remember - The algorithm isn't there to find viewers for your videos, but to find videos for the viewers.
Over the next few years I adjusted the intro, moved it to an outro, and got rid of it almost entirely. I will show you my experience, and why I dumped the intro. (Your mileage may vary)
My original vids were very short, as I said just showing the new house and neighborhood to my family back in the US. It was not until I started playing with the analytics in the new YT Studio that I started seeing a pattern. Which I think is kind of the point of the analytics. This is one of my first vids. There is no intro, no outro, but look at how smooth that retention line is. I wanted to get back to that. (but I also no longer make 2 minute vids ha ha)
I see everyone asking about SEO, tags, titles, thumbnails etc. Those are great to get ranked in search and get more clicks. But once they click on the vid - are they going to stay? I use the analytics to see patterns of behavior. The intro/outro was a glaring mistake on my part. They would click on my vid, and I would chase them away. That is not generally the best approach ha ha
When I got 'serious' about YT I made a 20 second intro. As many channels do. And look at that initial drop. It is pretty bad. I know I hate watching opening credits, so why would I think others would want to? And 20 seconds is way too long! These vids have a 20 second intro and no outro. You see a big initial drop, a fairly smooth decline, and no much of a crash at the end.
When I saw the horrid drop I decided to cut the intro down from 20 seconds to 3 seconds, and move the intro to an outro. I changed it up but still a 20 second outro? These are a 3 second intro, 20 second outro. As you can see the initial drop is not so bad, the views are pretty smooth, then a big crash at the outro. All I did was make people quit at a different time. Still the lesson I learned is intros and outros are bad for retention.
Then I heard that a hook at the beginning is good to grab their attention. Ok... I shortened my outro, and started using a hook. These are a hook, 3 second intro, 8 second outro.
Finally I gave up on intros and outros. Now I use a hook, most of the time, and no intro or outro.
I still see some initial drop, but not as bad as with a long intro. Also I see a better overall percentage viewed. On the older vids, I think many of the viewers did not skip the long intro - but clicked off the the vid entirely. The spikes are usually due to chapter marks. I would rather they skip ahead, instead of click off the vid. I am also looking at the continuous segment, and trying to learn what they prefer to see. Actually I forgot, I still have a 3 second outro, but my core audience likes it. At a school supply distribution party we have a bunch of kids yelling 'Thank you Tito Tim!'. I could cut that out, but it is only 3 seconds at the end... I do find that when there is a drop, it starts in the last 20 seconds that lines up exactly with the beginning of the End Screens. I am tempted to dump the end screen. I get so few clicks on it, I do not see that it helps me at all.
This has been a 2 year process. By cutting the intro/outro I am seeing a smoother retention line. There are some spikes, but overall it has smoothed out. There is still an initial drop, but not what it was with the long intro. I am also finding that a good hook helps minimize the initial drop. I am working on that...
We need to use the SEO to get clicks, but use the analytics to get the retention.
And remember - The algorithm isn't there to find viewers for your videos, but to find videos for the viewers.