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Koerner's long-form channel stagnated because the YouTube algorithm was confused by his mix of standalone shorts and long-form videos. Creating a new, separate channel for shorts allowed the algorithm to properly categorize and promote his long-form content to the right audience, sparking massive growth.
Stop creating separate social media accounts for different content types. Modern algorithms prioritize serving individual pieces of content to the right audience, regardless of your account's history or niche. A single high-quality post will find its viewers, making account-level siloing obsolete.
The creator treats short-form and long-form audiences as separate, noting that Instagram and TikTok followers rarely cross over to YouTube. Therefore, the strategy for short-form content isn't to promote the YouTube channel, but to drive viewers directly to a lead magnet or website to capture emails.
Unlike Instagram, which favors sharing via its integrated DM feature, YouTube's algorithm primarily rewards Shorts that hold viewer attention the longest. Marketers must optimize for audience retention, not just shareability.
YouTube Shorts effectively reach new audiences who may not see your long-form content. However, they don't reliably convert viewers into subscribers. Use Shorts as a discovery and sampling tool, not a primary channel for deep community engagement, which remains the domain of long-form video.
Before investing in long-form content, new YouTube channels should start by publishing Shorts. This low-effort format allows you to test content ideas, see what resonates, and signal activity to the YouTube algorithm, effectively "warming up" the channel for future growth.
Covering multiple unrelated topics on a single YouTube channel—a "carnival channel"—fragments your audience and confuses the algorithm. Focusing on a single, clear niche is essential for building a loyal, engaged community around a core value proposition.
The common advice to chop up a single video or blog post for every social platform is a myth. Each platform's algorithm and audience expectations demand native content. True growth comes from mastering one or two channels with tailored content, not from thinly spreading repurposed material across many.
Short-form videos are not meant to replace your deeper teachings. Instead, view them as the initial touchpoint—the first impression that captures attention and funnels new people toward your more substantial long-form content like podcasts or detailed tutorials.
Instead of one general brand account, create multiple hyper-niche accounts focused on specific topics. In an 'interest media' world, a brand new, topic-specific account with zero followers can achieve massive organic reach on a relevant post, often outperforming a large, generalist account.
Shorts viewers and the YouTube algorithm want self-contained content. Pushing viewers out of the Shorts feed is penalized with low retention, leading to flatlined views after the initial seed audience.