Inside the Life of YouTuber's Life

To continue off what we learned last week with how it digital analytics looked on YouTube and how YouTuber's use it to inform people how to use their digital analytics to shoot content of several different kinds of YouTube videos. It also gives an insight to how YouTubers use their social media life to help them incorporate different kinds of social media channels to show what they are doing.

I will first introduce you to site known as social blade, it is a site in which you can look up your favorite YouTuber and/or social media influencer. It calculates how many subscribers they have and the length of the time that helped get there. For example, lets look at David Dobrik. David Dobrik is a really well known YouTuber who used to be a Viner. Most YouTubers came from Vine, which was an app that created 6 seconds videos. Most of the videos were for entertainment purposes and that is how to spark of social media took off as well. David Dobrik then transitioned into YouTube which then lead him to start making money off YouTube instead of Vine.

For Example, when you search David Dobrik in the search box, the first thing that comes up is this profile.

This is the first page that comes up when you search David Dobrik. This particular page shows the grade that David Dobrik gets based on his performance on YouTube and other social media platform. It also goes to show the ranks in subscriber count that he has and it also shows the ranking his videos have on a number of views. It goes into detail of telling you his projected estimated earning and his yearly estimated earnings. It also shows the numbers of subscribers he has gotten in the last 30 days. A way YouTubers use this data by determining whether their audience likes their videos by checking how many subscribers they earn at the time of posting a video. For example, 


This picture shows the number of subscribers he gains every single day in the last 30 days. This is a good representation of how YouTubers can tell whether people like their video by the number of subscribers they get a day. If they start to loose subscribers then you know that the video you produced was not liked by your audience. 

This also shows the total number of views the YouTuber gets in a monthly period. This data also helps a YouTuber understand how many videos they should put out and how many people actually watch their videos. In the last post I showed you how it worked on YouTube. For the final post I will show you how YouTuber's use both of these different platforms to gain more viewers and subscribers.
Ray Price

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