Use Video Descriptions and Banners to encourage users to Like and Subscribe. Turn on Comments on Video Pages (you can always delete comments or block users). Use Playlists to group your content by theme to make it easier for users to find videos on your channel.
Getting more views on YouTube isn’t about just uploading videos — it’s about strategy, consistency, and optimization. Here’s a complete breakdown for you:
Use keywords in your title, description, and tags.
Example: Instead of “My Trip”, write “Goa Travel Vlog | Best Beaches in Goa 2025”.
Add timestamps and a detailed description.
Create clickable thumbnails with bright colors, big text, and emotion.
Hook viewers in the first 10 seconds (ask a question, give a quick preview).
Keep editing tight (cut boring parts, add music, zooms, text).
Add storytelling – beginning, middle, end.
Use end screens + cards to push viewers to your other videos.
Upload on a fixed schedule (e.g., 2 videos per week).
YouTube promotes consistent creators.
Ask viewers to like, comment, and subscribe.
Reply to comments (it boosts engagement).
Use community posts, polls, and shorts to stay active.
Shorts are pushed heavily by YouTube right now.
Repurpose your main video into 30–60 second clips.
Add trending music and hashtags (#Shorts #YourTopic).
Share your video on WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.
Post clips on Reels and direct followers to your channel.
Join Reddit, Quora, and niche forums to share your videos (without spamming).
Collaborate with other YouTubers in your niche.
Do shoutouts, guest appearances, or collab videos.
Check YouTube Studio → Analytics.
Focus on:
Click-Through Rate (CTR) → Improve thumbnails & titles.
Average View Duration → Edit better, keep videos engaging.
Traffic Sources → Double down on what’s working.
✅ Pro Tip:
If you’re starting, make search-based content first (e.g., “How to…”, “Best…”, “Top 5…”) — it brings consistent views. Then move into vlogs, entertainment, or personal style.