I just wait a week before I run tests and I run them until statistically significant. I do try to test to completely different thumbnails; I see people who test the exact same thumbnail with slightly different text and I cringe. When I am testing thumbs I am not just testing for that video but also to see if I can pick up a channel-driving style for future use.thanks Stanley that's good to know
do you have a system you follow or just gut feeling?
Also worth noting; one of the best tests I ever ran was a title/description test. My descriptions/tags remained the same but I ran a test for a highly optimized, SEO packed title versus a title focused more on being compelling. While my SEO scores suffered a bit the compelling title was a hand's down winner. Don't underestimate the value of testing titles as much as thumbnails.
Anecdotally, I generally prefer a "compelling" title and a lot of my YT role models espouse that even if it doesn't hit all the SEO marks. But it is nice to hear you did your own test.
When I do a YT search, I get really turned off by "keyword stuffing" because it doesn't really say much about what the video is about and I know what the creator is trying to do. But I also noticed that the 1st couple of lines in your description shows in these search results. When I saw that some months back, I went back to my older descriptions to tighten those first 2 lines and remove extraneous words. I also wrote complete sentences vs. just rattling off a few truncated phrases.
How you write and phrase titles absolutely matters. I learned the hard way.
This is what I would consider 'next-level' insight. The title acts as a 'supertag' for SEO purposes, so for beginners I would encourage taking advantage of that and utilizing this tool so that you can get in front of eyes in search. But once you get the hang of writing titles and understanding SEO and how metadata works you'll also understand that it all revolves around the viewer. The natural next stage of progression would then be to focus more on the viewer, which typically leads you away from tag-packing your titles in an effort to improve CTR and viewership. I wouldn't say learning this is the 'hard way;' it is important to build that foundation of searchable content while you grow your knowledge and understanding. And anyone who isn't going back and updating old videos is missing out on opportunities. We should all being doing that regardless of what stage we are at.
There is value in at least being mindful of your keywords/metadata as a large creator. Everyone thinks about their YouTube content on such a video-by-video basis and they miss out on the long-term opportunities present with a large library. That is where keywords shine; they give videos a 'second life' in search and allow for an evergreen foundation of views. But it is a balancing act; the most important thing you can do it first gain that click. And that comes down to the thumbnail and title.it's such a fine balance to get, but I suppose depending on how large your channel is will dictate which part of the algorithm you aim for with visitors in mind too.
keywords aren't such an issue if you don't worry about being discovered in search I guess
I very much appreciate that... I have worked closely with several larger channels but to date I have only managed to reach the 4k mark. I do some weird things that likely hold me back a bit; I don't own a computer (everything I do is done on a phone), I don't get too sensational with thumbnails/titles and fishing is a very seasonal niche (I have a very limited amount of time each year to get a video to pop off and this doesn't always align with good fishing conditions). All part of the game, I like to consider myself a 250k channel that just hasn't made it yet lolStanley I presume you have other channels as it says 4k on your subs, but I imagine from your excellent comments you have the experience from a channel of 100k?
Ooooh, man. Yeah you should definitely try it. My overall channel CTR jumped by 20% in the first 90 days I started AB's. Next to the Keyword Explorer it is my 2nd favorite tool that TubeBuddy offers.I've been wondering about this myself. I've done zero A/B testing. Starting to think I'm missing out.
There is value in at least being mindful of your keywords/metadata as a large creator. Everyone thinks about their YouTube content on such a video-by-video basis and they miss out on the long-term opportunities present with a large library. That is where keywords shine; they give videos a 'second life' in search and allow for an evergreen foundation of views. But it is a balancing act; the most important thing you can do it first gain that click. And that comes down to the thumbnail and title.
I very much appreciate that... I have worked closely with several larger channels but to date I have only managed to reach the 4k mark. I do some weird things that likely hold me back a bit; I don't own a computer (everything I do is done on a phone), I don't get too sensational with thumbnails/titles and fishing is a very seasonal niche (I have a very limited amount of time each year to get a video to pop off and this doesn't always align with good fishing conditions). All part of the game, I like to consider myself a 250k channel that just hasn't made it yet lol
I very much appreciate that... I have worked closely with several larger channels but to date I have only managed to reach the 4k mark. I do some weird things that likely hold me back a bit; I don't own a computer (everything I do is done on a phone), I don't get too sensational with thumbnails/titles and fishing is a very seasonal niche (I have a very limited amount of time each year to get a video to pop off and this doesn't always align with good fishing conditions). All part of the game, I like to consider myself a 250k channel that just hasn't made it yet lol