If you've been wanting to become a content creator, but you just can't figure out where to start or how to start, this course is for you. Maybe you're just tired of hearing the same advice, the whole pick a niche, be consistent, provide value, and you just want the actual tangible, practical ways to become a content creator. If that sounds like you, grab a pen and paper or download the workbook that goes with This video because right now I want to teach you everything that you need to know to grow to 10,000 followers, 100,000 followers, and
even replace your 9 to5 if that's your goal. The road map we're about to go over is the three-part framework that I've developed over the past six years of coaching thousands of content creators. During my time of being a content creator coach, I've identified three patterns or phases that every creator goes through and then I Turned those into a repeatable system so that I could teach it to you right now. The three phases that we are going to go over are build. This is where you're going to set the foundations of your personal brand and
business. The second is scale. This is like those growth strategies. How do you create content that's actually going to grow your platforms? Most people want to skip build and jump straight to the scale strategies, but without build, you won't See any growth. So build is arguably the most important. And then we'll wrap things up with profit. This is how to make money as a content creator. Then at the very very very end, I'm going to share with you the key to keeping your creator business running. This is a method that I developed specifically for this
video that I have never seen anybody teach anywhere. So, I am so excited to teach it here for the first time. And I think if you're going to Learn anything and apply anything from this video, it is going to be that final golden ticket, nugget, key, I don't know. I truly believe this one thing can be a gamecher for any content creator trying to grow their career in the creator economy. Now, this framework that we are about to go over is the framework that has helped hundreds of my students hit huge milestones like growing to
100,000 followers on Instagram in less than six months or Getting monetized on YouTube in three months. Having one single Tik Tok post bring in thousands of followers, and I've even helped dozens of creators replace their nine-to-five income with content creation. So, why am I teaching this framework in a who knows how long YouTube video completely for free? Because I believe content creation is one of the most powerful career paths somebody can choose today. And you are not too late to start your content Creator journey. Goldman Sachs has predicted that the global creator economy is going
to nearly double in the next few years, going from a $250 billion industry in 2025 to over $480 billion by 2027. That means there's about to be $200 billion invested into the creator economy. And I think you deserve to have a piece of that. My business mission is to help creators build sustainable careers and to shape the future of the creator economy. So Whether that means we ever work together, whether you buy a course from me or not, whether you subscribe to my YouTube channel or not, I want the best for you for creators. And
the only way I know how to do that is to teach. Now, I know my way is not the only way to grow online. There are thousands of creator coaches out there. And that's actually great news for you because that means you have so many options and different ways that you could try to grow as a Content creator. My only hope with this video is that I'm able to become a great resource for you and that one year from now you could look back on your journey and say, "Wow, that video was the video that
started the trajectory of my career." So, as always, timestamps are below. Use them if you need them. Let's jump in. Now, I apologize for my voice in this. If you've been following me for some time, you might notice I sound a little different. I've been sick for a Week now and I've been waiting for it to just pass and it isn't passing. It's not going anywhere. So, we got to get this video filmed. It's got to get edited and live in about a week and a half. So, we're just going for it. I got my
tea and we're just going to have a great time. Okay. Like I had said before, there are many strategies that you could follow to become a full-time content creator. Your strategy will vary depending on the creator you want to be Or your goals. The three main strategies that I teach are the niche approach, audience approach, and identity approach, or like you as your brand. If you've been following me for a while, this part might be a review for you, but it's important, so we're still going to go over it. Now, the niche approach. This is
probably the one that you've heard the most. It's the traditional way for growing online. The reason you hear this one all the time is because it Works. There's a reason everybody says it and it's because it is a proven way to grow any business is to niche down. Now, the issue that we have with niching down or with what everybody says is nobody really teaches how to properly do that. And when you niche down properly, you are identifying who your content is for, what type of content you create, and how you help people achieve their
goals. So, if you can identify all three of those things, that's a proper niche. For example, if you were to say fitness, I'm sorry, but fitness is not a niche. That's just like a industry. It's a category. You need to identify what kind of fitness for who. So maybe it's at home fitness for busy moms. That is more of a niche. And then with this strategy, you'll probably hear the terms like, okay, after you've niched down, now you need to identify content pillars. Yay. And then content pillars are the subtopics that you'll be posting about
And rotating between. So you have at home fitness for busy moms. Maybe one of your content pillars are like arm or upper body workouts. that's a pillar. Lower body workouts or maybe workouts that need equipment, no equipment workouts or like body weight workouts or maybe a pillar is nutrition and how to fuel your body as a busy mom. So like the subtopics under fitness. Now, I'm not going to lie to you. This strategy, you're going to hate this. It's actually My favorite strategy because it is 100% the way that you are going to grow the
fastest. If you want fast, rapid growth, niching down, we'll do that for you. People hate to hear it, but when you do it the right way, so many of my students have just blown up because they were just like, you know what? I'm just going to bite the bullet. I'm going to niche down. It works. And that's why I love it. But I digress. There are other ways to grow. If you can't figure out how to Niche down or if that doesn't feel true to you, that's okay. There are other options. So with the audience
approach, this is when you are just posting for a particular person. I just put part person doesn't mean it's part person. It's particular person. So you have like one person in mind and you are posting for them. You're constantly thinking how can I show up for them today? What do they need in their feed today? I also really like this strategy because it Thrives off of the algorithm. Algorithms across all platforms, Instagram, YouTube, Tik Tok, algorithms identify audience behavior. That's really all they are. It's human behavior. And so, if you can really understand your person's
behavior, what they like, what they don't like, what makes them say the video, and if you can really get into the psychology of a person, you're going to have no problem creating solid content. Now, the cool thing with the Audience approach is you don't have to pick one topic. You're picking one person. So, if this person is interested, let's say you're at college, you want to post for other college students. Anything that a college student would want or be interested in, you could post about. So, if I want to post about plants, cuz I love
plants, I can make a whole post about these are the plants that are in my dorm room and thriving indoors, right? Or if you want To talk about like fashion or affordable Amazon fashion for college students or even like food, if you want to talk about these are the meals that I'm eating, budget friendly meals for college students, you could talk about that. Or if you want to talk about like study tips and how you're studying, how to stay organized, you could do that. You see, there are multiple topics. It is an array of topics,
but you're always positioning those topics to appeal to a Particular person. With audience, instead of content pillars that you're rotating around, you're kind of rotating between your audience's interests and different things that you think would bring them value. We'll talk about value later, but this is kind of what you're rotating around. Now the identity approach or the you approach. This is the whole like you are your niche. This is typically for the creators who are like I'm a lifestyle creator. I just Want to post lifestyle content. I'm not making fun. I just use different voices
for different things. But if you want to be like a lifestyle content creator, this is probably the avenue that you'll go down. You just want to post really about your life and your interests. This is where you're posting about your life, your interests, what you want to post about. But where people fall into a trap of this, they end up being like a little bit sloppy with their strategy. So They're like, "Well, I just want to post about whatever I want. It's my lifestyle, so I'm going to post whatever I want." But then they forget
that you also have to have strategy with it. So they end up like not growing or growing really slowly, but you can do the lifestyle approach with the right strategy layered on top of it. So you still have to be intentional with what you're creating. Again, if your goal is growth, you can't just be like, "Oh, I'm Going to create whatever I want and I'm going to go viral." There's still ways to be intentional and have strategy. Now, I will say this one is the fastest way to grow. Niching down. audience I would say is
like medium growth and then this one is sometimes the slowest growth. So you get to kind of choose your own journey and you'll have to go in with the proper expectations of what that growth will look like. I'm not saying you can't grow with this one. You Absolutely can. Just know that growth trajectory might look a little bit different compared to somebody who went the traditional route of niching down and they grew like 10,000 followers in 30 days. So just go in with the proper expectation of what your journey is going to look like and
you'll be fine. You'll be okay. Layer it with strategy and you will grow. Now believe it or not, the strategy that you choose will affect the platform that you post on. The three main platforms that I teach and will be talking about in this video are Instagram, Tik Tok, and YouTube. When it comes to strategy options on Instagram, you have to niche down. People don't like to hear it, but you have to. As of right now, and let me tell you why. Instagram, their algorithm creates accountbased embeddings. This means that they actually assign your entire
account one topic. So, as you're posting, Instagram will say, "Oh, we see A common theme here. This person's account is about food." So, let's only show people interested in food their content. If you're trying to be a lifestyle creator on Instagram and you're posting about your daily vlogs, kitchen reorganization, what you wore that day, travel tips because you just went to Hawaii, if you're posting about all those things, Instagram will never be able to give you a proper accountbased embedding. and you'll just Be posting and posting and posting and posting and like never growing the
way you want to. And I say this with a specific person in mind. We started our creator journeys at the same time. We went to like both went to like similar creator events back in 2019 and they are still at the same place that they started because of this thing. They do not want to niche down, but they also don't want to pivot away from Instagram. And you just have to understand Instagram thrives off of niching down. If you don't want to niche down, don't pick Instagram. Pick somewhere else and you'll be fine. You'll see
great growth. But that's how their account or their algorithm behaves as of right now. With Tik Tok, honestly, you could pick any of the strategies that we talked about because with Tik Tok's algorithm, each video is categorized separately. So that's why with Tik Tok, you could be a lifestyle creator. Each video has its Own opportunity and is analyzed separately by the algorithm. When you post a video about fashion, Tik Tok will be like, "Oh, what's this video about? Oh, it's about fashion. Let's show it to people interested in fashion." Instead of categorizing your account under
one topic and then you're stuck under that topic. So that's why Tik Tok works for any strategy. Niche down audience or lifestyle. Again, audience is going to work here as well because algorithms Thrive off of human behavior. If you know your audience, you'll be able to work with the algorithm instead of against it and it'll be easy peasy. Okay. Now, YouTube, I will say any strategy works on YouTube as well, but you really have to, if you don't want to niche down and you want to go the audience or identity approach, you really need to
take the time to understand SEO and how that's going to work with your given strategy. SEO is a Huge part of YouTube and SEO is not hard. It can be very very easy. Especially nowadays, I think back in blog days when people everyone was building a website and a blog, SEO was hard. But now with modernday technology and social platforms, it's actually simplified a lot more. And so I think people have this preconceived notion with SEO where it's like, "Oh my gosh, it's too hard. It's intimidating." Yeah, it was back in the day, but nowadays
It's actually pretty simple. If you're open and willing to understand SEO, YouTube's going to be a great place for you. Now, for each platform, your best bet for Instagram is short form content, vertical short form content, aka reals. That is going to be uh your best mode of content to attract new eyes and grow. For Tik Tok, short form vertical as well. That's going to be the best platform or best form of content for growth. And then YouTube. This is where If you want to be a long form content creator, you're going to be on
YouTube. Okay, let me help you identify even more similarities and differences between all these places. Let's just talk about Instagram for a second. Is going to be really great if you enjoy batchcreating content. You love filming content ahead of time and having like 20 videos in the pipeline, 10 videos in the pipeline drafted and ready to go. Batch creators perfect for Instagram. Instagram is also A really great place for coaches or educators. If you're a coach educator, this is going to be a really good platform for you as well. A lot of coaches will batch
ahead of time because tips are usually evergreen. Like they're not relying on trends that are happening this week. So, I can make a video right now on, oh, here are some tips for filming your video and whether I post it now or in 3 months from now, it'll still be relevant. So that's why coaches Usually do well with batching content and perform well on Instagram. They have a niche. They know what they're educating on. So that usually works really well there. Now, I will say with Instagram, monetization is not the best when it comes to
their monetization tools specifically. Like you could have millions of views and they'll pay you 5 cents. You know what I mean? So the monetization tools on Instagram, not great. But I will say if you want to go The brand collab route or even selling digital products, those work really well on Instagram. Brands are obsessed with Instagram. They love collaborating on reals or stories there. So that works really well. So, if you're a niched down creator, you'll probably get some great collabs and also automations for selling digital products. That works really well on Instagram with autodm
features or tools like many chat or Stan who you can set up funnels, make sure you're making Money passively. All that works really well on Instagram. Now, let's talk about Tik Tok. Tik Tok is great for anybody who has no idea what their niche is and they want to test and post content in all places to figure out what is like their thing. What creator do they want to be known for? What type of creator do they want to be? So, if you want to test content, Tik Tok is going to be your place. Tik
Tok is also going to be really great for casual creators. And What I mean by casual creators is maybe you don't batch ahead of time. You can't don't have the time to or you have a hard time with batching and you work better on the go on the fly. You're like, "Oo, I have a video idea." You record it right then and there. You want to post it right then and there. If you just want to like post, time doesn't matter. Don't want to have to think about batching ahead. Tik Tok is going to be
really great. Especially the Format of just like a casual holding your phone talking to the camera. That format works really well on Tik Tok versus Instagram. Doesn't work as well there as of recording this video. So, if you're more of a casual creator, Tik Tok's going to be a really great place for you. Now, I will say Tik Tok, they have some pretty good monetization options. They have Tik Tok shop. They have live streaming and badges and all these different ways creators can Monetize with Tik Tok and get paid pretty well. So, I do like
Tik Tok monetization tools. I think they're really great, especially if you're somebody who wants to thrive off of affiliates. Affiliates. Yeah, if you want to thrive off of affiliate income, I think Tik Tok is really great for that. If you enjoy going live, Tik Tok is really great for that. Now, you can be an educator, a niched educator that wants brand collabs and sell digital Products on Tik Tok, too. Tik Tok is probably the most flexible of all the platforms. So all of these things here like niching down, batching, creating, being a coach, wanting brand
clubs, and selling digital products, all of that can apply to Tik Tok, too. It's such a flexible platform. So, I'll help you identify which one at the very end, but let's talk about YouTube. We talked about the lifestyle strategy probably being the slowest strategy of them all. YouTube is going to be the slowest growth platform of them all as well, but they pay the best when it comes to monetization. They have it figured out. They have it down. They've been in the game for a while. They know how to monetize and treat their creators really
well. So, I really do think they're like a creator first platform, the creator firstminded. They have so many resources for creators and also if you want to build like dieh Hard community don't know why I'm saying that but YouTube's going to be really great. So it's a slow growth but it's like so impactful and meaningful when you do get that growth. It's like the best thing in the world. Honestly, YouTube is my favorite platform but I am biased. I've been posting to YouTube since I was basically in my mother's womb. So how do you know
which one's going to be best for you? I have like a fun quiz to help You identify which platform is going to be best for you. It's linked in the workbook if you're following along in the workbook. But choosing a platform can be as simple as asking yourself, which platform do you enjoy being on as a consumer? When you open your phone, which platform do you naturally gravitate towards as a consumer? Which platform do you enjoy being on and creating for? For me, that's YouTube. I love watching YouTube videos as I get Ready in the
morning. I play them while I'm doing dishes, while I'm in the shower, while I'm driving. I don't watch them while I drive, but I'm playing them like they're podcasts while I'm driving. I love YouTube. I love being in the space. And so, for me, I knew like I wanted to be a YouTuber. I just had that feeling. And so, I just want you to ask yourself when you think of yourself being like, let's say you are the next big creator, you are the next Ryan Trey, The next Alex Earl, whatever it is. When people ask
or identify you, they're like, "Oh, yeah, that's the Tik Tocker or that's the YouTuber." You know, that's the Instagrammer, I don't know. Ask yourself like what platform do you want to be associated with as you grow? And which platform also brings you the most enjoyment? For me, it was not Instagram. I had so much anxiety anytime I would open the app, look at the app, tap the app, like Instagram gave me so Much anxiety in comparison. And so that I knew I was like, "Okay, that's not going to be my main focus. I know it's
going to be a great resource as I grow and tool for the business that I'm growing, but it's not going to be my main thing. YouTube's going to be my main thing. So, always do that gut check with yourself to figure out where you want to be. This advice might be contrary to other educators opinions and tips, but I truly believe you only need To choose one platform in the beginning. And what I mean by that is I want you to focus on one platform when it comes to strategy. When it comes to creating content
for one specific platform and doing content research, figuring out the algorithms's behavior, the audience's interests, spending your time studying analytics. I want all of your strategy and effort to go into creating content for one platform. Be focused on just that platform. You can repurpose that Content to other places if you have the capacity to do so, but you do not have to be everywhere in the beginning. I notice people will say, "Oh yeah, you need to post everywhere. You need to be everywhere at all times. You need to be blah blah blah blah blah blah."
And I feel like that puts so much pressure on solo creators who maybe are juggling being a parent and a full-time job and that pressure of like, "Gh, I can't do this because I have to be everywhere. So What's the point of even trying if I have to be You do not have to be everywhere. You do not have to. That is non-existent. Not a thing. You absolutely can just choose one. You can just grow on one and that is totally fine if you don't have the capacity to be everywhere else. When you put all
of your effort into one platform, at least those that strategy effort into one platform, that focus, you're giving a 100% of your energy there instead of You're thinking, okay, I'm going to make short form content and I'm going to apply it to Instagram, YouTube, and Tik Tok. And then I'm going to see, okay, well, what went well here? Why did it go viral here and not here? Well, this got more comments, but this one got more saves. You're then spending 33% energy here or 33 here. You have split attention. you're chasing multiple things. You don't
have a clear focus when you focus on just one platform and You can really understand how to improve your content there and then distribute it elsewhere. Now, if having multiple platforms is important to you, that's okay. That's fine. You can repurpose. I found when doing my deep dive of Forb's top creators that the top pairing was actually Tik Tok and YouTube. So those two paired really well together. What I noticed people would do is they would create short form content on Tik Tok. They would then do two things. Repurpose That short form content as a
short or as shorts and they would then also create long- form versions of that short form content and direct people to their long form platform or long form YouTube videos. So I noticed these two paired really well together. That was the most common pairing. And I will also let you know that Instagram and YouTube, they did not pair well together. At least what I've noticed with myself and my students. When people have a YouTube Channel and an Instagram, they would try to create short form content and then direct people to long- form videos, but their
audience would never go watch the long form videos. For some reason, the Instagram users were not interested in long- form content at all, but Tik Tok short form users were interested in long- form content. So, that was just like interesting pairings that I had discovered with myself, my students, and also analyzing Forb's top creators. Okay, now that you know the platform that you're going to be on, your platform options, let's finally get into build, shall we? Now, that's all part of build, but let's start like building your brand and identifying the type of creator that
you want to be. The first thing that I want you to do is have like a brand brainstorming session where you sit down and you journal about a few things. The three most important that I want you to actually take the time to Answer. You could pause this video and fill it out in the workbook, but answer these questions. First thing that I want you to journal about is what do you want to be known for? So, there's different ways you could go about this. Let's say one year from now, where are you? What does
your daytoday look like? How are you showing up? What's that shortterm goal with content creation, with your platform, one year from today? Where do you want to be? What do you want to be Known for? Same thing. Do that same exercise, but think more like three to five years from now. What do you want to be known for? If you were to be interviewed or introduced on a podcast, how do you want somebody to introduce you? What are you known for? How many followers do you have? How are you making money? How much money you
making? How much per month? Where's that money coming from? So, that's what I want you to ask yourself when it comes to like What do you want to be known for? Then I want you to ask yourself, what kind of content do you want to create? This is just like a good way to identify what are those first few videos that you're going to be making. Is it like day in the life videos? Inspirational content. There's no right or wrong answers here. So, just like brain dump, what kind of content do you see yourself creating?
And then finally, who is your content for? Are they male or female? Where are They located? What are they currently struggling with right now? On top of that, how can you help them with those pain points? Now, if you I don't want to say are a very rare person who doesn't fall into any of these categories, but if you truly cannot answer any of these questions, I've actually worked with one student who could not answer any of these questions. So, I'm throwing this out there as an alternative. Another question that you might want to ask
Yourself instead are, what are some dream brands that you want to work with? The student that I had worked with, they didn't know exactly what they wanted to be known for yet or like who to create content for. But what they did know is some dream brands. They're like, "Would love to work with Sony. That would be really cool. Would love to get free lenses. That would be really cool." And so they just brainstormed the type of brands they wanted to work with. And That can also give you clarity on the type of content you
want to create because if you want to work with those brands, you got to create content in alignment with those brands and content that those brands would be interested in seeing. So, this is another way to start getting some clarity on your personal brand, the type of content you want to be creating as a content creator. If you're having a hard time answering any of these questions, something that Helped me when I was trying to get clarity on what I wanted my niche to be because I knew I wanted to niche down. So, what I
did was on one of our long drives, my husband and I, when we were commuting from San Diego in LA, I asked him, I was like, "If you could come to me for advice on anything, what would it be?" And he said, "Instagram and organization." And I was like, "Oh, interesting." He was like, "Yeah, you're really good at Instagram." At the time, This is like 2019. He's like, "You're really good at growing, posting consistently there and like staying organized. Even the closet, like you keep our closet really organized or even like project management as a
project manager in corporate at the time." So, he's like, "I feel like you're really good with organization, getting things done, and even Instagram planning, executing." So, that was how I niched down in the beginning was, "Oh, okay. I'm going to teach Instagram." I taught Instagram on YouTube, but I was like, I'm going to teach Instagram. So, asking those close to you, if they could come to you for advice on anything, what would they come to you for advice on? That was something that gave me a lot of clarity. Now, the good news is it's okay
to not have all the answers cuz these answers, they're not final. These are not the end all be all. This is your brand. You did it. You figured out your Personal brand. We're done. Like, no. The goal here is not to have this perfect brand. Now, that's not what we're creating. This is just your initial brand brainstorm. You're just getting everything out. You're starting the brainstorm because this is going to give you a starting point. And then over time, as you take action on this starting point, more clarity will come. You have to be willing
to take action without clarity. If you don't have that Clarity yet, that's the whole thing of being a content creator. your content strategy evolves almost every single month. So, if you're willing to just like have something and like start to take action on it without knowing all the ins and outs and everything perfectly, you're going to be fine. And just accept that you'll figure it out as you go, everything's going to fall into place. If you're following along in the workbook, you will probably notice with Every activity that we're doing and everything that we're we're
working on, I also actually have different AI prompts to help guide you. So if you need help getting clarity on like your branding, there's different AI prompts that you could plug into chat GBT and be like, "Hey, can you help me with blah blah blah blah blah?" So you just copy paste the prompts and chat can talk to you and help you identify everything that you need for your branding and Other stuff that we're going to get into. So just know that that is another resource to help you AI. Okay, now that we've kind of
picking platforms, branding, getting some clarity on that initial brainstorming, I want to do some actual examples with you. So you could see how this works in real time. Let's do an example. And let's say this person, they want to be on Instagram. So they want to niche down. Now, all of the examples that we're actually going to be Going over today are real life students that I work with in the BSP model in our Slack community. If you don't know, the BSP model is the IV League for content creators. It's like an online university for
content creators that teaches you what we're going over today. Build, scale, profit model teaches you everything from A to Z, how to become a content creator. There's hours and hours and great templates, downloadables of resources there. So, these are real Examples of students that I've worked with and how we've gotten clarity on their brands for each of these platforms. When you join the BSP model, you immediately get access to 30 days of our private Slack community. So that's where I work with my students and help you get clarity on your niche, profile audits, content, and
after those 30 days, there is an option to renew and like more of a membership fee to maintain access to the Slack community. But yeah, that's just a little overview of the BSP model. A lot of everything that you're learning today is part of the BSP model and all the examples we'll be doing are real students. So this student that I worked with, she wanted to niche down. And so because she wanted to niche down, we went with Instagram. And she also liked Instagram. That was what she was already on and familiar with. So her
niche and what she wanted to be known for was home organization. And specifically, she wanted to help busy moms with home organization and how to like maintain cleanliness, aesthetic, keeping the house clean, all the things. Basically, home organization for busy moms, everything that they would need to know. So, then we went over her content pillars. This is the post about. Remember, if we're niching down, we're going to do traditional content pillars. So the different content pillars that we created for the post about were space by Space organization. So that's like okay kitchen organization, closet organization,
bedroom so location specific organization. We also chose quick wins or methods as another pillar for her. So this is like 10 minute tidy routine. Do this reset before bed. So those quick hacks, tips, tricks, methods to create like instant wins and instant organization. Then there was more long-term systems or wins. This is more okay. strategies for toy rotation, chore Charts, getting things done, routines that you could establish, how to properly organize toys for your kids, or toy rotation tips, chore charts, and age appropriate chore charts, morning routine. So, these are more like systems that you
could implement into your routines for long-term win and organization. Next was timesaving tips. how to schedule in cleaning into your day-to-day planners, organization, things like that. And then our favorite One that we landed on was budget friendly hacks. So, this is like, okay, you don't have the biggest budget in the world, but you want to organize your closet. So, like dollar store organization hacks with different items at the dollar store and how to make them look elevated or upleveled. how to repurpose containers that you're getting to reduce waste and use those containers for organization. This
was the one that we kind of wanted to lean into and Really make her more well known for that. So, we'll talk a little bit about how we positioned her for this one. Now she has a lot more clarity with this strategy of what she's going to be posting about, who she's posting for, and these are the different types of content that she will be rotating about on Instagram. And we'll talk about, okay, well, now that we know what to post about, how do we come up with actual video ideas? We'll talk about That, too.
So, this is just one example for Instagram. Let's do another example. This one, we'll do this one for YouTube. I'm going to use an example that I see all the time with BSP students and I feel like a very common niche people want to be in. If it's not lifestyle, usually people are like, I want to be a wellness creator. And I'm like, I love that, but that is so broad. We got to figure out like what's going to make you stand out among all the other wellness Creators out there. So, I actually had a
student come up to me and she was like, "You know what, Millie? I want to be a wellness creator. That's what I want to do. And I want to post about diet and nutrition, exercise, mindset, money, and all the things. And immediately when I see this, I'm like, okay, this is very broad. This is going to be like talking to everyone, talking About everything, and it's not going to stick quite well. You still want to have very targeted strategy. So, I was like, "Okay, well, let's niche down by choosing a specific audience that you want
to reach." And I feel like that's like a common theme with the other one, busy moms. And then also this one, this student, she was like, "Well, I actually have a chronic illness. What if I focus on wellness specifically for other people with chronic illnesses?" So, she Wanted to target other women with chronic illness. her post about actually became diet, nutrition, meals, and clean products for people with autoimmune diseases or chronic illnesses. This became exercise and autoimmune mindset. Same thing applied for chronic illness, money, managing money and finances while paying for different treatments or medications.
We even added one other pillar which was more chronic illness education and talking about how to Identify that, what that means for you, your lifestyle, how you could how she could help people with chronic illness. So we actually added this final pillar. And now on YouTube, she has a clear audience. So, she could talk about any of these topics and YouTube isn't going to care because she has narrowed down who it's for and that's going to help YouTube tremendously deliver her content to the right people. So, the audience approach is what we ended up doing
for YouTube. Now, finally, let's do an example for Tik Tok. Now, for this example, I'm actually going to be using myself. I felt like talking through life lifestyle examples, just talking off the top of my head, not having a script, using myself as the example is going to be easiest. When asking myself, okay, if I were to create a personal TikTok, what do I want to be known for? Lifestyle, right? I just want to be known for me. That's what I want to be known for. I Don't want to be known for like a topic.
I don't want to be niched down, put in a box. I just want to be known as Millie. So then when asking, okay, well, who do I want my audience to be? My answer is really, I don't know. I I don't know. I just want people who are interested in me and my life. You know what I mean? So, let's skip the audience and jump to post about and all I know is I want to post about my life interests, maybe different life pillars or traits that Are unique to me and my life. These are
going to be harder to identify because if you're doing lifestyle content, everything feels normal. Like nothing feels, "Wow, this is so cool. Other people would be really interested in this." So, when I kind of brainstorm, okay, what do I want to post about? I'm going to ask myself, what are different interests, themes, or things that come up every day in my life? Because if I'm creating a lifestyle page, what are Those recurring things in my life that I could create content on? For me, coffee is a big one. I make coffee every day and I
love my coffee and I love experimenting with different homemade syrups, lattes, all the things. So coffee is like, okay, yes, I for sure want to post about coffee. And during my initial brainstorming, I was like, well, I get dressed every day. And I enjoy fashion and finding my style as a new mom, so I want to post about fashion. And I also enjoy reading. I'm in a book club. Shout out book club. Nobody watches the So I want to talk about books because I read often. I audiobook, Kindle, physical, you name it. Love reading. Also,
I am a new mom. I have a 10-month old when you're watching this. So, maybe I want to talk about just like things that come up as a firsttime mom. And then something else that I've been dealing with is like working out, but it's different than before having a Baby. So talking about like what it's been like getting back to working out as a postpartum mom because it took me like seven months before I could actually walk without being in pain. So these are just the recurring things that happen in my day-to-day life. They are
like the life pillars. I do all of these things or these things come up every single day. So it's going to be really easy for me to create lifestyle content around these Things that come up every day. And now my audience, I'm just going to be like people with the same interests or season of life as me. That's probably going to be like other moms, other firsttime moms, but I'm going to leave it kind of vague. People with similar interests. You could be interested in coffee and not be a mom. You could be interested in
books and not be a mom. Or even like a guy or a girl, you know, like that doesn't matter. You could be interested In any of these things. You're welcome to my content. If a student came to me with this as like their initial brainstorming strategy, I'd say, "Great. That's exactly what you need to get started." But if somebody came to me and they're like, "This is my final plan. This is never going to move. We're sticking with it." I'd be like, "We'll see. We will see." Because what you will find for me, this this
is actually exactly what I did when I first started My personal TikTok. I was like, "This is these are the things I want to post about. This is my life." D. What you'll find as you take action on this initial brand brainstorming is sometimes the content's not going to click. You think you want to post about something and then you do and you're like, I hated that. For me, that was fashion. Personally, I love it. I love piecing things together or try attempting to. I don't think I'm like a fashionista at All. This is from
Ross. And I tried making some different fashion videos and it felt so not me. It felt inauthentic. It felt weird posting about it. I was like, I don't want to be known for this. Like, I don't want to have to worry about like looking good all the time because most of the time I'm wearing sweats or pajamas, but when I do dress up, I enjoy it. But I found that this over time became irrelevant. This is such a normal part of content evolution, Which is actually something we'll talk about in scale. But ideally at this
point after doing the brainstorming and answering and journaling about those questions, you have some brand clarity about what you want to be known for, who you want to reach, what you want to post about or even the brands that you want to reach, the free products you want to get. All of that gives you a starting point. So with that clarity, we can start moving on and implementing. Now we Are in the phase where you are we are going to start setting foundations for your brand. How to implement your brand clarity into your profile which
is arguably one of the most important steps that a lot of people skip. Putting your brand clarity into your profile is basically positioning. Positioning is the intentional way you shape how your followers see you compared to everyone else in your industry. It's how you set up your personal brand and content to Establish a competitive edge and hold a unique place in your followers mind, aka how you're going to stand out. As you get more clarity on the type of creator you want to become, the positioning that you implement into your profile will become more clear
and it'll get more and more specific, which will always help you. So, your bio will likely be changing and evolving over these next coming months and that's fine. So, let's talk about how to do that. We have Instagram, Tik Tok, we'll talk about YouTube. with Instagram. Starting with the basics, you have your username and profile photo. Ideally, these pair really well together. Most of the time, your username is going to be like your name or something related to your industry. One of my students, Jess, her handle is you can do it gardening. And believe it
or not, she is in the gardening niche. You could even do like fitness by Sophie if you're in the Fitness industry or just it's Millie Adrian. You could just do like your name. So have it be simple, easy to spell, nothing too complicated. And then ideally your profile photo will match your username. So if you're in the fitness industry, you got a fitness related photo. If you're doing fashion fashion related, you want it to be like a good headsh shot, smiling, showing your face. No Snapchat or Tik Tok filters that are like overdone. Solid, Good
lighting profile photo. Okay, now we have your name plate. This is the bold part of your Instagram bio. This is arguably the most important part. Even for Tik Tok, we have like your handle, profile photo, and then you have like your name here, the bold part. So, the reason that is so important is because this is the most search friendly part of your bio. Example, if I wanted to go find a brand strategist right now for my brand, I could go on Instagram and type In brand strategist and the results that Instagram show me will
be based off of who has brand strategist right here in their bio. if they have brand strategist right there, they are showing up in search results. So that's why I have content creator tips because if somebody goes to Instagram right now and they want to look up content creator tips, I want to be the person that pops up as a resource for that. So you want to ask yourself, what do you think your Audience is searching for? How would they categorize you? Is it a mindset coach, home organization, art business tips, beginner artist tips? Right?
So, what do you think your audience is looking for to find content or people like you? Same thing with Tik Tok, Social Media Coach. I have that as like the name plate. The interesting thing with Tik Tok is when you comment on somebody's video, your name will show up as the commenter as opposed to Instagram. If you comment on someone, your username pops up. So, if I say, "OMG, I love this video. Great tips." It's going to say it's modern Millie commented versus on Tik Tok. It's not going to say it's modern Millie commented. It's
going to say Millie social media coach commented. So I like to say social media coach on Tik Tok. Because if people find me in the comment section of another video and they're scrolling, they're going to see go to The comment section and they're going to be like, "Oh, this person's a social media coach. I'm curious. Click." And so that's why I have social media coach. Not only is it search friendly, but that's what people see when they see that I've commented on another video. So, if somebody finds me in the comment section, they're going to
be like, "Oh, this social media coach is commenting." So, that's why I have those two things a little bit different. Then, we have your Bio. Your bio is not about you, believe it or not. It's actually about who you want to follow you and you're going to tell them why they should follow you in your bio. Your bio is going to be a combination of your unique edge plus a call to action, ideally to somewhere you own. Now, I actually I don't want you to follow my example because this is the whole like do as
I say, not as I do thing because right now my strategy is not growth. I'm not trying to grow as a New content creator. I've already established my platforms. So, my bio looks a little bit different than let's say you who are actively trying to grow and build a more established platform. We're actually not going to use my bio as an example, but I'll show you how to apply this unique edge call to action combo. So, what is a unique edge? Your unique edge is the one sentence that clearly explains why someone should follow you
and what sets you apart from Everyone else in your industry. It's similar to a mission statement, but I feel like a mission statement is more about like you, who you're about, what your business is about, and your values, your mission as a creator, whereas your unique edge is kind of crafted to appeal to your audiences or your ideal followers selfish mindset. You're trying to convince them with this sentence that they should follow you. This is going to describe who should follow you, how you Can help them, and what is like an instant result that they
will get from following you. Right now, for example, let's do mine as an example. Who I help? Who is my content for? I'm going to say teaching aspiring content creators. What's the how? How do I help them? how to replace their 9 to5 and what's the result in under 12 months with content creation. So if I am an aspiring content creator and I read that sentence immediately I want to follow because It's telling me exactly what I'm going to gain from pressing the follow button. What results can I get? I can learn how to replace
my nineto-ive income in under 12 months. Heck yeah, I'm going to press the follow button. So, that's an example of a unique edge. Let's do some examples from the other students that we had already talked about. So, let me erase this. Some examples. We have my student who was doing the home organization. This is her unique Edge helping busy moms organize their homes with simple, budget friendly systems that only need 10 minutes a day. The result is you can have a clean home in 10 minutes. That practical number of okay, I can do this in
10 minutes. Super relatable. I have another student who she's an artist and she has like grown her own art business and so she wants on Tik Tok. So this is her unique edge that's currently in her Tik Tok bios helping you build your art business in 100 days. Her freebie goes along with that 100 day format too. I also have a student on Instagram. She's a bookstagrammer and so this is hers helping you find your next favorite read. She focuses solely on fantasy and romance and then call to action how to get free books. So
we'll talk about the call to action in a second. These two I didn't include the call to action but that is kind of the framing of your unique edge. If you need A little bit more support writing it, I do have this little formula that you could try. See if this works for you. I help audience achieve result through method or time frame. I love the whole method time frame approach because I feel like that is what makes you stand out from everyone else in your industry. Also, you don't have to say help. It could
say teach, inspire, educate, what have you. So that is your unique edge. Then you are going to layer that with a Call to action. For me, I love to use a little emoji, but I don't know how to do it on the iPad, but I'll usually do like a finger pointing down or an arrow. And then the call to action will say free 12 month creator plan. with your call to action. Again, ideally, you are leading people to some place you own because right now, Instagram, YouTube, Tik Tok, you don't own those platforms. They could
literally disappear overnight. We have seen that happen with Tik Tok. So, You want to get them somewhere you own, which is an email list. We're going to talk about more about call to action email list freebies in a second. Let's do or jump to Tik Tok. With Tik Tok, you have limited space when it comes to your bio characters. On Instagram, you have 150 characters and on Tik Tok, you're limited to 80 characters. So, when I have my unique edge statement, I literally will just plug it into chat GBT and I'll be like, "Hey, can
you Shorten this so that it fits an 80 character limit or even 30 characters if I want more space for things?" Because I know some people I will say other bio strategies you can have some people you will want to put an email in your bio because that is a great way for brands to find creators that accept collaborations or do PR opportunities. So if you're a content creator who wants to pursue the brand collaboration route, having space for an email address will Be important. So that's one thing that you could do. But basically I
would work with chat GPT to fit both the unique edge statement email and call to action all within that character limit. So that is how you can apply it to Tik Tok. Same strategy. You still want the unique edge which that one student who is helping you grow an art business in 100 days and then she had her 100 day guide as the call to action. Now, with YouTube, YouTube is going to be a little bit Different because the profile setup, it's different. You don't have the bio, the call to action, because most people, they
don't first land on your channel. They first land on a video. So, your strategy is actually going to be focusing on packaging each and every video you post. So, your strategy, most of your efforts will go into the title and thumbnail when creating a video. There are strategies you can do to make sure you have SEO implemented in your Description, in your channel tags, how you set up your account. I actually have a full video on my YouTube channel. It's completely free. It's a 20-minute tutorial teaching you how to set up your YouTube channel. So,
I'll put that in the card above and I'll also link it in the workbook so it's easy for you to just find if you're following along in the workbook. And that'll help you set up your channel. But then um coming up with video ideas, packaging, that's Actually going to be more of the efforts for getting people to find you, discover you, and getting them to follow you. It's really what you're putting inside your videos. So this whole name plate, bio, call to action, unique edge doesn't apply much to YouTube. Setting up your bio and profile
is so so so important. I have two examples of the power of setting up a profile with strategy and intention. One, I have this student. She was an aesthetician, aesthetician. She Did lashes. She had great content strategy, but she wasn't getting reach. And so, I took a look at her profile. I was like, "You need to change your bio. You need to add a bold, search friendly part to your name plate, and you need to update your bio to be a little bit more specific and explain why someone should press that follow button." All she
did was change her bio. She didn't change anything else. She didn't change her posting strategy, videos, nothing. Within 24 hours immediately started getting more followers because she was easily discoverable in her industry and it explained clearly her bio explained clearly why people should follow her just from changing her profile. She started getting more followers. She didn't have to post anything to get followers. It was just from her positioning. So that is so powerful. Also had a student we were working together and again your bio setup will Always vary depending on what your goals are. With
this student specifically, they were posting kind of for two audiences. So, they had creators and filmmakers, videographers, but also they wanted to be hired on set as a DP or to be like a cameraman on site or a producer on site. So, we had to make sure the bio appealed to both of those things. So, we made sure to put DP in the bio and email for contact. And literally, I'm not kidding. The next Day, somebody reached out and said, "Hey, I need help with a shoot. What's your day rate?" Literally, your bio is so
important. And people overlook this. They're like, "Oh, whatever. Let me just type whatever I want." But you got to go back to like, "What are your goals? What do you want brand collaborations?" You do. Put your email address. Do you want people to follow you? Tell them why they should follow you. It is not about you, your life, your interest. It's about What someone else can gain. And if you want to be hired for something or you do UGC, say UGC with your email address. Say what you want to be hired for, what you want
to be known for, just please follow my advice. Set up your bio the way that I'm telling you to and you'll see amazing results. Thank you. Come again. Have a great day. Okay, welcome back. >> [laughter] >> Let's talk about email lists because I've talked a few times about call to actions and getting people somewhere you own. And that place is an email list. If you are unfamiliar, an email list is a list of email contacts you own because each of those people opted in, raised their hand, said, "Yes, I want you to contact me
with XYZ. I'm going to give you my email address in exchange for said freebie." So, you grow a list of contacts where you have 100% control of the algorithm. Anytime you email your Email list, you have 100% reach. It's not like a 3% engagement rate. Like, no, you reach 100% of the people that are on your list. Most of you will be rolling your eyes at this whole email list thing. And I know that because that was me. I remember when I was growing as a content creator, I had two-hour commutes um from LA to
San Diego because I was working in San Diego, but living in LA at the time. And I would listen to like Jenna Kutcher's podcast. What was it Called? Oh, Gold Digger podcast. Influencer podcast from Julie Solomon. I was listening to all these content creator ones. Money made Marketing Made Easy, Amy Porterfield. She recently changed it to the Amy Porterfield show, but I would listen to these podcasts and they would always say, "Start an email list." And I was like, "No, thank you. I want to be a content creator. I don't want to be a blogger.
I don't want to grow a business. I want to be a content Creator. I want to be an influencer. I don't need an email list." and I was wrong. [laughter] I think every single person can benefit from having an email list. Content creator, whether you think you need it or not, it takes less than 24 hours to set up. So, why not do it? What's your excuse? What's your excuse? Why not? Why not? Why the hey not? Whether you think you're gonna need it or not, it's so nice to have because what if Tik Tok
Goes kapoof and all of a sudden you have to reach your people, your followers, and you can't because Tik Tok doesn't ex exist. You got an email list. You could be like, "Hey guys, it's so crazy. Tik Tok got banned." And now like you can talk to your people because you have an email list. I want to tell you a story. I tell this story all the time. So if you've heard it, I had this student and we started working together. We were working oneon-one and I asked her what Is her goal and she's like,
"I want to hit 10,000 followers by the end of the year." And I said, "Yes, let's do it. We can make it happen. First things first, let's do your email list." And she was like, "I said I want to grow a 100,000 followers on Instagram. This this has nothing to do with Instagram. What do you mean?" And I was like, "Just trust me. You can do it in this weekend. It's going to be really easy, really fast. just set it up and we'll jump to Instagram. Okay, just set it up and then we'll teach Instagram."
She's like, "Fine, I'll set it up." Literally the next day she's like, "Okay, I'm done. Can we do Instagram now?" I was like, "Yes, great. Perfect. Let's put your freebie in your bio." Think nothing of it. Now, let's grow on Instagram. Well, sure enough, not only did she hit 10,000 followers, but she hit up to like 30,000 followers and her email list was growing because her account was growing. So, as She was growing followers, she was getting hundreds of people signing up for her email list. And again, she didn't know what this was going to
be for, but hey, it was growing. Wow. Yay. Love that. And then after she hit that goal, we hit that goal. I think it was 30,000 followers. She came to me a few months later and she was like, "Okay, my next goal, I think I want to offer coaching. I think I want to like work one-on-one with people." And I said, "Let's email your email list. let's send an email out when you're ready to start coaching and open it up to the people who are warm already and expecting to hear from you anyway. And so
she's like, cool. She works on the coaching, she figures out the program and we send the email to her email list and it sells out. And with that one email, she replaced her corporate job, quit, put in her two weeks, and ever since then, this was in 2020 when we first worked Together, she has been a full-time content creator and has not gone back to the corporate world because this is what she wants to do. That was what she wanted to do. And it was possible because of an email list. Okay, I love email lists.
Um, I used to not, but now I do. So, I can't tell you how many students have come to me and they're like, "I didn't. I was going through the BSP model and you told us to do an email list and I didn't want to, but because I'm in the BSP model, I did and I'm so glad I did because blah blah blah blah blah." And so, it's worth it. Thank you. So, growing your email list, basically you are going to offer something, some sort of freeish that your audience wants and in exchange for that
freeish, they are going to give you their beautiful junk email. I'm kidding. Actually, maybe maybe they will give you a junk email. I don't know. I do that sometimes. But they're going to Give you an email address. when they give you their email address, you will be growing your email list and it's going to be great because then you could start sending emails, send little notifications to people and it's going to be so much fun. You actually don't have to send emails right away or nurture the email list, but you still want this like list
of people that you can contact at any time, ready to go just in case. Now, this product right Here is called a freebie or an optin or a lead magnet. People refer to it as different things. For the sake of this video, we're going to call it a freebie. It's a free thing of value freebie that they will get when they give you their email address. There are different types of freebies. You have you have like a digital product. You have templates. You could create a planner. You could make a I don't know a cheat
sheet, some sort of checklist. Honestly, a miniourse can still be a freebie or like a webinar. In a sense, this video is a mini course, but along with the miniourse, you have the workbook that goes with it and that is the freebie that goes with this mini course. So, that's a digital product, a workbook, lots of different ways to give free value. You could even do like a quiz, another lead magnet. The purpose of the freebie or the best way to create one is to solve a problem that your Audience has with one simple downloadable.
Solve a problem, create a solution. My first freebie was Visco editing templates or like formulas. I created this YouTube video that went viral for me at the time and it was how to create your own Instagram aesthetic and edit your videos. And then I created like a series of like how to edit your photos to be fall vibes, how to edit your Photos for summer vibes. So like I created a series and then with each video I put out, I created Visco templates where somebody could download it and then follow the Visco formula. Visco is
an editing app by the way and they could get the same results for editing. So that was the first freebie I made. It solved the problem of making editing easy. The pain point is don't know how to edit, don't know how to make my photos look aesthetic solution here. Just follow these templates, this visco preset and you will have this type of editing or this type of photo. So that was my first freebie I ever created. The question is, how do you create a freebie? What the heck do you create a freebie on? What to
do? For me, what I did was I went to Pinterest and I looked up different content pillars or topics that I thought my audience would be interested in. So, I think what I had looked up at the time, it was like photo Editing and then apps, ideas, iPhone formulas. Thought that was interesting. And so I just kind of scrolled and saw, oh, people have like different presets. What if I made like a bundle of these presets to light and airy, a fall vibe? So, what if I made a bundle? And that's kind of the strategy
I went through. You could even do if you're in, let's just do like me right now. Instagram tips. Going to search this. See what Pinterest is showing me. Posting guide. Starting a Brand new Instagram account. Here's what your first nine posts should be. So, this is like quick downloadable. Your first nine posts done for you. Seven quick Instagram hacks to boost your reach. How to go viral on Instagram. How to start blogging on Instagram. Instagram for beginners. When should I post? So, how could I turn this into like a bundle of like a free guide
for content creators? If we are in the home organization Industry, we're going to just like look up home organization 13 easy home organization ideas that actually work. I want it to be a little bit more specific. What do we do? Hacks. Here's a little cheat sheet. So, a cleaning schedule planner. That could be a great easy printable one. Cleaning checklist. That could be a simple freebie. So, you can use Pinterest to get inspiration. You could also go to other competitors or niche neighbors, see what sort of Free offers they're offering and see if that resonates
with you if you want to create your own version or a branch off of it. Wouldn't obviously would never copy somebody word for word, but you're just getting inspiration. When you have that idea of what you want to create, you are going to go to Canva templates and first you could literally look up the template. Like if you want to do a checklist, you could look up checklist. Canva has plenty of free options. Ideally, you find one without a crown. This one has a crown. That means you have to pay for it. And this one's
nice. So, you could click on that. Change the branding to match your own style. If it's more of like a workbook, you could type in workbook. Search. Already done for you. I need one without the crown. This is 14 pages. I like the simplicity of this one, though. So, let's customize this template. Now, we're actually going to create the freebie together. You're Going to change the colors to match your own branding. Make sure to swap out all the text images. But usually, no matter what freebie you are offering, whether it's a checklist or visco templates,
the format that I want you to follow is this. I want you to have the cover image or the title. This is going to be freebie title. Okay? So, you're going to title page. Then, I do want you to have a about page, but this isn't about you necessarily. This is more about the Freebie. It's like an overview of like, hey, this is how the freebie came to be. This is what you will get after using it, or this is how to use it the best way. here are tips for how to get the most
out of this freebie. So, it's like, "Hey, I'm Millie." You do want a picture of yourself to create that con connection, but also people want to remember who did they get this from so that when they're scrolling online again and they see a post from you, they're Like, "Oh, yeah, that was the girl that made the Visco template." So, having a picture of yourself on this front page is very helpful. And again, it's not about you, it's about the freebie, how to get the most from that freebie. And then right after, this is just one
page. Keep it simple. Then you're going to get straight into the goods. If it's a long workbook, having a table of contents is great. If it's not, just delete table of contents and get straight to the point. Do the checklist, do the planner, whatever it is. And at the end, if you can, you could do like a little thank you and have your socials listed everywhere. Some mistakes that I see happen, I see people getting a little too messy with the branding or with the layout. So they'll put so many words and then they'll make
they'll have like all the words touch the edges which just makes it look so cluttered, so overwhelming to read. So that that's a little much. It's a little overwhelming. So always use Canvas's guidelines. See that purple square? I never like to put the text outside of the purple square. That's usually what I'm focusing on and I'm spacing things out. So, it's there's a lot of like breathing room with your freebies. So, when in doubt, simple is best. Once you're done actually creating your freebie, you're going to download it as a PDF. If it's Something that
you want your audience to print and use, like a checklist, make sure everything's black and white because most people are going to print in black and white. It might not have color. So, just keep everything simple. And then you're going to download it. Make sure you title it and download as a PDF. Okay. Once it's downloaded, the simplest tool to actually deliver your freebie to your audience is going to be Stan. I freaking love Stan. It's Literally your all-in-one platform for content creation or as a content creator because Stan, this is your link and bio
tool. So, when you have a call to action, for example, on my Instagram, my call to action 12 month creator plan, it directs people to my Stan store, kind of like a link in bio. And so, people go to my stand store and let's just click on my Stan store. And this is what they'll see. This obviously iPad and then on Instagram it'll like scroll or on mobile It'll scroll. So these are all the different things that I have set up. And the cool thing is all these people can access directly within Stan. What I
mean by that is you as the Stan user, you can collect emails by offering a freebie. You can sell a digital product and make money directly through Stan. You could do URLs. So if you have like an Amazon storefront, you could set up an affiliate link. This is just the um iPad app, but on desktop you're able to set Up courses and sell courses. You could offer webinars. You can set up a membership or community. So, any way you can think about making money as a content creator, you can actually do directly through Stan. So,
that's why I love them. And you have the email list option and you can email your email list through Stan, too. So, we're going to choose collect emails. This is where you would put the title to your freebie subtitle button. We're going to upload Our file document Canva. This is the file open. And then you press publish and it's on your link and buy. It's literally that easy. Boom. Shakalaka, you're done. On desktop, you'll have more customization for like the landing page or the email that gets sent when somebody downloads it. You could customize that
email. That's how you set that up on stage store with your freebie title cuz you're Going to put your freebie as a call to action in your bio. You want it to be like juicy and like people need it, you know? It's not just how to organize your home, you know, that's vague, that's broad. It's kind of like the unique edge where you want to get so specific on the transformation or the unique method that you're using. So, I have like the 12 month creator plan. It's basically what it is. It teaches you how to
become a content creator in 12 months. What you Do every single month working towards your creator plan. So I have again in the workbook I there are prompts that you can plug into your AI bot of choosing and talk to chat GPT or Claude whatever you're using to work on like that perfect freebie option and how to craft it. And then of course like okay well how do I fit the title into like less than 50 characters or what should I write for the subtitle. So all of those are strategies that go into choosing Your
freebie too is like making sure you have a strong title and call to action that gets people actually onto your list. And sometimes you'll make a freebie. This has happened with the student before where we made a really good freebie and we knew it was going to be powerful for their audience and they launched it and like two weeks later it didn't get any downloadables. So we just changed the packaging the title of it and then we got like maybe a Few more. So we updated the title again and finally after like two title changes
people finally started downloading the freebie. So don't give up if right away a freebie doesn't work. you just might have to restructure the title or the packaging of it a little bit before you start getting traction. So, you will be putting your freebie call to action in your bio. And also, when it comes to YouTube, where you're going to be putting your freebie is actually going To be in not only the description of your video, but also you're going to put it as the pinned comment. So, so long as it's relevant to the video, anytime
your the videos that you're posting connect to the freebie that you have, you're going to put that freebie in your description and pinned comment. And that's how you can start building your email list on YouTube. You could also put it as the main link. We have five links here. I have different linked Options, but the main link is the place that you want to direct the most traffic to. So you could also have it as your main link. And we are just moving on to scale phase two. Now we're in the like content creation phase
of your journey. You have the brand clarity. You've updated your bio, your profile. You're ready to direct traffic to your profile because it's set up for best follower conversions. Now let's talk about where you might be at with your content. And Each and every one of you will probably be in a different phase of brand evolution or content evolution. First, we have phase one. This is somebody who is just getting started and you maybe did that brand brainstorming for the very first time. You've never posted content and you're still trying to get some clarity of
like who the heck do you want to be as a content creator. So, you are in that throwing spaghetti at the wall phase with your content. Usually, There is no strategy here other than let me start exercising my content creator muscles. Let me figure out how to film, where to film, do I need gear, how the heck do I edit, what editing apps do I use? Maybe you're just getting comfortable in front of the camera. So, this is like those first, what's it called? growing pains of, okay, I'm just gonna throw spaghetti at the wall,
see what sticks, see what feels authentic to me when it comes to like what kind of Content I want to create, how do I in implement content creation into my day-to-day lifestyle, where does it fit, where can I improve? So, this is the throwing spaghetti at the wall phase. Next, we have the brand clarity phase. We don't really know how long the spaghetti at the wall phase lasts. It's different for everybody. You might be throwing spaghetti at the wall for a year or it might just be like two weeks and you're like, "Boom, I got
it." So, This phase could last a while and over time as you're posting, you get that brand clarity. When you know what you want to do, who you want to create content for, who you want to be as a content creator, and you start adding the unique edge into your bio, and creating with more clarity, this is when feel things feel like, okay, ball's finally rolling. There might not be like a lot of advanced strategy here, but at least you're posting with clarity and You're in alignment with, okay, I know what I want to do
in in my content creator journey and I know where I want to be in 5 years from now. Our next phase, this is going to be clarity. When clarity meets strategy, this is the phase where you're like, okay, I'm going to start taking things more seriously. I want to figure out what to post, how to post, how often to post. You're going to start doing more intentional content research. You're going to be paying Attention to your analytics a little bit more. You're going to start figuring out what kind of videos get more views versus follows
versus engagement. So, you're going to start being a little bit more curious about how to improve your content in all these different areas. says, and maybe you're diving more into educational content and really wanting to figure out those like, okay, what are what are these advanced practices or these next best practices I could do to Improve my content and add strategy on top of my clarity? This is kind of the stage where you'll notice you're starting to find your audience. It might not be like viral growth, but you'll notice things start clicking with your audience
here. things are clicking for you up here. You're like, okay, yeah, we're getting clarity. But here is where things start clicking for your audience. You're getting a little bit more comments. You're getting a little bit More followers. You're starting to understand, ooh, this is on the nose. I think this is the type of content my audience wants. So, you're starting to get more clarity when it comes to strategy. Then phase four is your video packaging. This is more than just, oh, what sort of videos do I post? Let me rotate between content pillars. This is
leaning into the psychology of crafting your video. You're thinking more about the hook. How do you capture someone's Attention in the first 3 seconds? The editing strategy of, okay, now that I caught their attention, how do I keep their attention and retain them to watch 100% of the video all the way through? You're thinking about okay if I want to deliver this piece of content what's the best method to do that is it talking to the camera is it voice over is it green screen by by sharing an article is it a trending audio like
you're thinking more about okay how do I package this in the Best way to deliver it for my audience so there's this next level of advanced strategy here is where I see people going to like that 100k mark here you're probably getting 1 to 10,000 followers. And then as you go to video packaging, you're probably starting to get upwards to 100,000 followers. When you get when you really understand video packaging, you're like, "Cool, I've crafted videos. I know how to do I know the psychology." This is when you go to that 100K mark. Maybe 50.
I'll say 50 to 100K mark. And then we have five. This is getting into brand recognition. This is when you're starting to dabble with the branding of it all. What people associate with branding and really fine-tuning. These are my fonts. These are my colors. This is the text animation that I use. These are all the sound bites that I use in every video. This is how I always edit the intro to my vlogs. You're starting to figure out what makes your content You verycoded as a content creator. You're realizing, oh, my messy bun, that is
my signature look. You're realizing, oh, I love coffee. I'm always going to have coffee and hold my coffee in all my videos. That is brand recognition. You're starting to identify these little things that people can start associating with you. Colors, your location, where you're filming. If you're holding a pen while you're doing your videos, you're Starting to layer in those elements of you and starting to recognize that for yourself of like, oh, this is how people can start like immediately recognizing me even like color grading or the filters, presets that you're using on your videos.
That could be part of brand recognition. And then after you get clarity on this one, that is finally when you have created like your personal brand. You've got it nailed down. Usually this phase here and here, that Is when people are getting up to the 1 million follower point because they have their personal brand dialed in. They have clarity on everything. They got the strategy that feels in alignment with them. So, this is usually the evolution that I see creators go through when it comes to their content. And it's funny because I feel like when
a lot of content creators start or my students are starting, they want to start here or here. And they want to like, all right, I need to dial in on my fonts and colors. And I'm like, you can do that, but they're going to change. And they they always will change. Your content is always going to evolve over time. And this clarity usually only happens as you're taking action on all of these things. So, I don't want you to go in with these expectations of like, okay, I'm going to make videos and they're going to
be perfect. I'm going to have my personal brand from the jump. Like, It's okay to not have the personal brand from the get-go. Some people will because they maybe you've been watching this and you've been here for a few years and you're just like, "Okay, I need to like jump to here and you're ready to dive into video packaging." So like everyone's going to be somewhere different, but I think it can help take a lot of pressure off of your shoulders knowing like it's okay to not have it all figured out. It's okay to not
know a Hook or hook strategy yet or how to package a video properly and deliver it the right way. Like you don't need to know all these things because first you're here and then you're going to start getting clarity here. So there's this evolution that happens organically as you're posting. And so you'll probably hit all of these markers at some point, but wanted to kind of visually show you where you'll be. And now we can kind of talk about each of These stages and tips to kind of get you through each of these stages so
that you have that personal brand clarity. And not only clarity, but I I mean we all love a good 1 million follower number. So, not only is this going to help you with like clarity on your brand, but as you go through it, you have these follower milestones that you will naturally hit not with like secret hacks of use these hashtags, not because of hacks, but because you understand your Content, you understand your audience. And honestly, content and brand clarity, that is what brings followers, not little hacks and tips and tricks. So, I'm going to
start with some basics from stage one. I feel like most people watching will actually be in stage three where you're like, "Okay, I want those intentional clarity, strategy, layering, and then phase four with like video packaging." So, I feel like most people will be there, but I do get a lot of Students who find BSP from YouTube and they're they're also in stage one. So, I do want to spend a little bit of time talking about some basics that I think will be helpful for anybody who is at these beginning stages. I didn't want to
just like breeze right by them. If you have learned something new so far, be sure to give this video a thumbs up because that's going to tell YouTube that other creators like yourself will find this video extremely valuable. And If you learn two new things by the end of this video, I want you to consider subscribing because it is simply a great way, free way to support me, my channel, my business, and it allows me to continue to make content like this for you and content creators every single week on my YouTube channel. So, consider
engaging with this video in any way you can. Send it to a friend or creator that you know that you think might find it valuable. and just wanted to do that Little call out before moving on. Let's talk about getting comfortable in front of the camera cuz I feel like that's something a lot of creators on TikTok struggle with. The one thing that you could do to help yourself getting comfortable in front of the camera is film one thing every day. Just turn that into a habit. Film one second of your life every single day.
I have an app literally called 1 second every day. And over the past two years, I just record One second of my life every single day. Sometimes I'm in it, sometimes I'm not in it. And it just gets me into that habit of pressing record. And it could be the most mundane things. Like sometimes I'll just record myself doing the dishes or myself doing laundry or I just get a little shot of my YouTube setup or my coffee or my food. I want you to start filming yourself every single day. Ideally, it starts with one
thing every day and then over time it's Film yourself doing one task every day. You could talk to the camera, you could not talk to the camera. Just getting into that habit is going to be that first barrier wall to break. And it's not with the intention to post. You never have to post anything, but just practicing setting up your camera, pressing record, getting in front of it. If you do that every single day for like two weeks, by the end of the two weeks, you're gonna be like, "Okay, this is Feeling less intimidating. Let's
take it up a notch." And then you could like practice talking to the camera again without the intention of both. Just practicing. And so that's just like one thing that I say. Just start filming one thing in your life every single day. Move that to filming yourself doing something every day. And then you'll have a little bit more confidence to then film talking to the camera. and you don't have to talk to the camera every Day, but that is kind of how you get a little bit comfortable in front of the camera. When it comes
to let's talk about gear. Really, honestly, all you need is your phone. It could be I I put iPhone cuz I have an iPhone or Android, whatever the heck you have, use your phone. My first few YouTube videos, I used my phone, filmed and edited and posted on my phone. So, you don't need fancy equipment. One of my favorite quotes is from Arthur Ash. I believe he Was a like legendary tennis player. It was start where you are, use what you have, and do what you can. That is like the mentality that that I want
you to go into content creation with. Because believe it or not, I think a 100% of my content on Tik Tok for my personal Tik Tok, all phone. Never touch my camera. With my business, I'll go back and forth between phone and camera. If it's a brand collab, I'll definitely whip out the camera. If it's not some, it's Usually my phone. So, most of the time I'm just using my phone. No fancy tripod mic setup. And then what I like to do is as you hit certain milestones, you could kind of like reward yourself with
gear. So, one of the first things that I did I after I hit I think it was 10,000 followers, that's when I got my very first tripod. So, when I hit 10,000 followers on Instagram, I invested in a tripod. And then when I got like my first brand collab, that's when I Invested into a mic. When my YouTube channel got monetized, that's when I bought my like first YouTuber camera. So after my YouTube channel got monetized, that's when I got a camera. Now, when it comes to your phone, let me actually just pull this out
real quick because I'm sure this will be helpful for you. Camera settings. We're going to go here. We're going to go to our camera. For video, I typically film at 1080p, 30 frames per second, and I do 1080p Because across platforms, Instagram, Tik Tok, YouTube, short form content auto defaults 1080 is the format that those platforms, they're already at 1080p. So, I don't do 4K. I don't think my content needs 4K. So, I will do 1080p. If you want to do 4K because you have the memory for 4K and you want that crispness, you absolutely
can do 4K at 30 frames per second. Just make sure on whatever platform you're uploading to, there's an option where you can choose Upload at highest quality. If that's not checked, your videos will look blurry because the compressor when you go to upload a video like on 4K on Instagram, they have their compressor that'll automatically compress your file to 1080p if you don't have that checked. So that's why just keeping it safe, I always do 1080p. And then here, I like the grid level and mirror on. So those three I like on. Then I'm always
filming with the back camera. Takes some time to Get used to. In the beginning, I used the front-facing camera, which again is fine if you're just getting into the habit of it. But then over time, I started practicing the back camera. Let's talk about filming. Ideally, you're the I know people are going to say lighting. The best lighting is natural light or like by a window. So filming by Windows help if you don't have ring lights or soft boxes or anything. Backed cam on phone is going To give you the highest quality. When I'm filming
short form content, I love lots of head space. I want it empty up here. I want lots of space because that's where I like to put text for my videos or closed captions as options here. So, I think the biggest thing to think about filming wise is head space. We're running out of space. Head space. You want lots of head space. Okay. Make eye contact with the camera instead of looking at yourself. And like you don't Have to stare at the camera, but just like for me, if I'm using a teleprompter, I'll still naturally like
look off to the side because if I was in conversation with somebody, I wouldn't just stare at them. So again, these things all take practice, but I'll look at the camera and then like if I'm pretending to think, I'll like look off to the side and like now I'm looking here and then I look there. So have natural eye movement while maintaining Eye contact. When it comes to editing, you could use the platform specific editor. My preference is Tik Tok. If I had to pick one platform specific editor, I think Tik Tok is better than
Instagram's and YouTube's. So there's that. Even like Instagram has edits, but everything Instagram has glitches so much. So if you don't want to edit in Tik Tok, there is also Cap Cut. Now, something to know about Cap Cut, the app, they changed their terms of service So that any footage that you upload to the app, they retain some ownership of. So, you will still own all your footage, but they will also own your footage so that they could use it however they want to use it. So, that's something some people don't love about Cap Cut
since they updated it. For me, I don't really care because I'm like, what are the odds that they're going to use my janky like coffee content in an ad? And if they do, whoopde-doo, I guess, where it could be Run into issues for us, John, my husband, and I, we don't show our baby's face on social media. That's something that we don't want to do right now. And so, I wouldn't want to upload footage of my baby in CFK cut because then they could use it. So, alternatively, there are other editing apps. I did a
whole comparison on editing apps on my YouTube channel, so you can watch to see what are good Cap Cut alternatives. I do think Adobe has Premiere Pro. It's a Newer app, so they don't have all the features that Cap Cut does, but they have a really good enhanced audio feature that I I love so much. It makes it sound like you have a mic when you don't. So, I think Premiere Pro is really cool if you have like crap audio. You don't got a mic, which not having a mic doesn't mean crap audio, but I'm
over exaggerating. You have crap audio. Maybe you had to film from really far away and it's super echoey. Premiere Pro Enhanced speech game changer. So, cool. You also have InShot. So, InShot is another option. Again, there's there's a lot of other ones depending on what you're looking for. So, you can watch my comparison video on that. Okay, that kind of covers stage one, I believe. We already went over stage two, which is like you get brand clarity and you're starting to post. So now we could go into strategy, the whole what do I post about
now? What you are going to post Will vary depending on your goals. You know, if your goal is growth, follow the rest of this video because I'm going to teach you what to post about. If your goal is not growth, hey, what the heck? Post whatever the heck you want. That's fine. It doesn't matter. You can post whatever the heck you want. But if your goal is growth and you don't have strategy and you're posting whatever you want and you're not growing, you got to start asking yourself, "Oh, maybe I Should be more intentional with
my content research and what I'm posting." In general, all of you will be posting video of some sort cuz video right now is the best way to be discovered. So, how do you figure out what to post about? You are going to do content research. Now, there are three places that we're going to go over to do your content research. We have search engine. With your search engine, this is basically going to help you predict what Your audience wants and what they want to see. The search engine strategy is going to help you predict what
your audience wants to see. This is basically the strategy where you your strategy is going to be how can I show up in search results. Whether that's on Instagram search, Tik Tok or YouTube search results, you want to show up in search. When people go to look for something, find answer to something or look up reviews on a product or whatever. [snorts] How can you get in front of their eyes and show up in search results? Next we're going to study is homepage or for you page. On YouTube it's like the homepage. Tik Tok for
you. Instagram it's like the reals tab. And this area is going to show you what is currently being pushed and recommended. Not only that, but it's going to show you what's being pushed organically. didn't have to implement any sort of like too much SEO strategy, but Organically, what's trending? What results are popping up? Yeah. So, we have like also like trends with this. So, how can you show up on home? And then we're also going to utilize your niche neighbors or competitors and you're going to study their content to figure out what is currently resonating
with your audience. This will make sure your videos are reaching your people. So, these are the three different places that we're going to do our content Research to make sure our videos are showing up across the board and reaching the right people. Let's do this together. So, I'm actually going to go to Notion. I have a content calendar that I'm going to be using. This content calendar is part of the workbook. So, you can get access to this and apply the same strategies that we're going to be doing together with this content calendar. Going back
and forth between GoodNotes, I'm going to go here and We're going to use my Tik Tok one for example of figuring out, okay, what can I post about and have a little bit more clarity. So, we're going to look at maybe like coffee or postpart first-time mom postpartum books. I want to figure out like what sort of videos are going to be working well right now. So, first thing we want to study is search engine. So, I if my goal is to grow on Tik Tok naturally, what platform are we going to study? Tik Tok.
So, we're going to go Home search and I'm just going to type in coffee and see what is suggested here. Now I am looking at these suggested results first because this is literally Tik Tok telling you hey these are the most common searches when it comes to coffee. People when they look up coffee they actually are looking up coffee vlog. They want to see coffee vlogs. People are looking up coffee Tik Tok coffee aesthetic coffee recipes. Tik Tok is telling you what people are Looking for on their platform. It's amazing. So, automatically I'm drawn to
coffee recipes because like I said, I enjoy making my own little recipes and making my own syrups and all the stuff. So, I'm going to write down coffee recipes first and we could just like elaborate on them. Coffee recipes going back or anything else maybe like coffee at coffee bar station. I think I have a pretty cool coffee bar station. So, let me just do coffee bar station. So, I'm Just kind of like keeping track of these recommended results or suggested searches. And now, we're going to actually click on one that I would be interested
in creating content on. So, I'm going to click on coffee recipes. And I am going to look at these recommended results or these top results. Now, what I suggest doing is actually applying a filter because you want to know what is currently working and currently performing well in search Results. So, I'm going to do like the last 3 months and I'm going to apply salted maple latte. Maple vanilla bean. It looks like maple fall has been kind of like the vibe. Salted maple. That's funny. Maple. Salt and maple. Brown sugar shake and espresso. So, I
actually do have a salty map. I call it my salty map. I have a salt and maple recipe that I think is really good. So, I'm actually going to expand on this idea a little bit based off of the videos that I see. Salted maple latte, salted maple vanilla shaken espresso, salted maple brown sugar. I'm going to do the text that we were seeing on screen. I'm going to go to text hook text. And I think what I want my video to be is salted maple shake and espresso. And the emojis are important. I noticed
they were using emojis a lot. I'm gonna do like that. Was there like a syrup one? I thought there was a syrup one. No, it's fine. So, we have a coffee recipe and That looks like it's a pretty good one. And then I'm just going to kind of like keep going down the rabbit hole. And any video that you see, you're welcome to save it and create collections based off of the different topics that you'll be posting about. So maybe I want to do a new collection and this is going to be my coffee inspo.
Save. And then you could come back to it. Anything that gave you inspiration for later. Let's do an example on Instagram. We're going to Go to search. This time we're going to do books. So I'm going to say book recommendations, book talk. Let's go with book recommendations. And again, as you could see here, book recommendations, book recommendations, book recommendations. It's in their name plate, the bold part of their bio, and that's why those people are showing up. Anywh who, now I'm going to look, again, we want to kind of filter out the older posts with
the newer ones. So, when I'm Doing this search, I'm going to look at the date that it was posted to make sure it's relevant. So, this one is January. Great. This one, December, not bad. But if I notice one is from like October, a little bit older, might not be relevant anymore. So, I'm kind of looking more recent posts. What's working well? Books I knew were five stars before I finished. I like that hook. I think that's really cool. So, I'm going to go back to notion and I'm going to write That down. Books I
knew were five stars before I finished. I think that's brilliant. Good idea. It could also be the hook text. So again, if I wanted to, I could save it. Add to collection. Bookstagram. Save. So we're kind of just getting info right now. Now, bonus strategy. When you are doing this, I want you to pay attention to the viral follower conversion rate. That is totally the term. So this post I like. I'm like, oo la. It has 2 million views, Which I'm like, okay, viral. if it went viral for them. Will it go viral for me?
Let's check. Let's go to this person's profile. What? 120 followers, 2 million views, amazing ratio. Ideally, what we're shooting for is like the views are two times the followers follower count. So, if like I came to this profile and saw that she had 5 million followers and 2 million views, it's like, okay, well, no wonder it had 2 million views. They have 5 million followers. So, let's let Me show you an example of maybe somebody. This is 309. That's great conversion. All these are great conversions. Okay, here we go. Yeah, Haley fam, I love her.
Follow her on YouTube. She's the best. Her and Ryan, they're great. But, as you could see, 2.6 million views. This might not be one that I want to implement in my strategy because the reason it has 2.6 million views might be because she has 1.6 6 million followers, right? So, pay Attention to someone's follower count. Same thing when you're doing your research on Tik Tok. If you notice, let's see. Oh, this one's not showing views on iPad. But if you notice a video has like 1 million, go to the person's profile, see if it's viral
for them. This one almost 2,000 followers and almost 350,000 views. So, that's a great ratio. Ash is definitely on to something. Her coffee content seems to be working really well. At least this One and this one went viral for her are performing above average. So those are the ones that I want to be paying attention to. This same strategy works for YouTube. Y'all go to search. If I look up Instagram monetization, branding edits tutorial, reals, comments, real compilation, Instagram edits tutorial, it's going to show me like, okay, maybe I could do a edits tutorial. So
same thing, YouTube, utilize the search engine. Write down your video ideas. With YouTube, the video idea could be that. And instead of hook text, you're going to do like the title inspo. So, you see, okay, I like this video. It's performing well. It has a good subscriber to view ratio. Again, you're looking this person, I wonder who that is. They have 650,000 subscribers, only 43,000 views. Not a great ratio. So, maybe this uh packaging could improve. So, let me find somebody. Almost 100,000 views and oh, 1 million. Justin Brown. Justin Brown. Justin Brown. This one's
looking good. 2.2 million views. And with the time frame on YouTube, I usually look within two years. Two years is like the max out I will go. One year is great. Anything less than a year is like, okay, something's working well with the packaging of like the title thumbnail. So, I'm keeping track of instead of like the hook text, I'm paying attention to the search phrase and the pairing of the title thumbnail. That's what I'm going to be writing down in my notion content calendar. The second place that we were going to go over is
like the homepage, which is basically just like the reals tab, Tik Tok for you page. And you need to understand like you have an algorithm that's serving you biased content. So on the reals tab, what you're going to see is catered to you and your interests, but it's still showing you what's being recommended to you. So you're just going To pay attention to like what is somebody saying in the beginning of their videos, what text popped up at the beginning of their videos. Do you notice any recurring sounds and all of this stuff? Is there
an industry update? How are people capturing attention? I asked an FBI hostage negotiator how to handle that's too expensive. Here's his answer. like how are people showing up on home or in reals? That'll apply to Tik Tok as well. Now, I I I know I focused on Instagram and Tik Tok for the search engine one. So, I kind of want to focus a little bit more for the home on YouTube. With YouTube, sometimes what is showing up on your homepage is not necessarily what will show up on someone's search results. So, when I'm posting videos
to my channel, some videos I'm thinking, "Oh, wow. This is going to be a great resource when somebody searches up this term. Other times, for example, this video, how to Use Hootsweet, the best social media management tool for businesses, Instagram edits app, full tutorial, how to actually pick a niche. Like those phrases are things people are looking up. So that's me trying to show up in ranking and search results over time. That's not me trying to make a viral video and blow up and reach crazy audience. There are other videos that are more okay, home
page. How do I get on somebody's homepage strategy? For Example, I thought this video, stop making just one video with your content. That's not very like search friendly, but I thought the thumbnail would perform pretty well on a homepage or even like this format with like the tweet format. I thought that would perform well on a homepage. So, sometimes there's different intentions behind a video and that's totally fine. So, you just want to pay attention like what sort of videos are Coming up on your homepage? What fonts are people using? When you're on your phone,
are the fonts easy to read? How are people using thumbnails to stop attention and stop a scroll? And then how do they pair their title with that thumbnail? Most of the time, I will say when you're working on your video packaging and you're pairing title thumbnail, the text that you use in your thumbnail is not going to be the same text that you use in your titles. So, Example, this video from Cody Sanchez, lock the f in. She's not saying lock the f in again in the title. She's saying how to actually achieve your goals
in 2026. So, this captures attention of the scroll. And then this tells you what the video is about. Lock the f in. Whoa. Wait, what is she talking about? And then hard now, hard later. Then you have the title, how to actually achieve your goals in 2026. So, it's like, oh, okay. If I want to lock in for 2026 and hit my Goals, this is the video I want to watch. So over time, you learn video packaging on YouTube, it's definitely something I dive further into in BSP. But again, those are kind of the things
you're looking at on your homepage. For example, I have switch account. This one and this channel, this homepage is going to look a little bit different than my other homepage. So because I consume different types of content on both channels. So this can show me like Another aspect of content creation and it's like oh okay here's another style thumbnail that I could try for this style of content. So that is how you can utilize the homepage to figure out what to post about. Then finally we have your niche neighbors. This one is a fun one.
And what you're going to do is you are going to actually let me pull up. This is a creator that I follow on my personal Tik Tok. Love her. Britney girl, I doubt you watch this or follow Me, but literally I follow her on my personal page and I love her. She's so cool. Okay, so she would be like a niche neighbor because she makes coffee videos. So, I'm going to go to her profile. I'm going to filter by popular and I'm going to see like what is popular, what viral videos have she created and
recently popular. So, I'm going to like scroll through again, look at the dates to see are there any recent videos, the most recent viral ones. Now, I'm kind of looking within the last 3 months. This one 1111. Now, let's analyze the video. Let's What was the starting frame? What was the hook text? What's the audio? What What's the pacing? How long is the video? So then I'm like starting to analyze the video, kind of studying editing styles. How could I recreate this in my with my own twist? So this one resonated with her audience. It
was this one 34.8,000 views compared to 20,000 followers. I Think that's really well really great. I'm going to like save this again as inspo for coffee in my coffee collection to recreate later. So I could again I'll add that to my notion. I could do coffee. Why do I keep doing three Fs? coffee vlog and then I could link specifically to her video, Britney's video. Share, copy link. We have notion paste. Done. So now I could quickly reference that video as Inspiration. Now that's one way to do it. filter by popular and then find the
most recent or just stay in the default view and kind of skim the last 20 pieces of content and check to see which one went viral for them above their average. So it looks like average she's getting 3 2 4,000 views on videos. So I want to look for a video that's like 6,000 maybe even 10,000 like this one 10,000 that's viral for you viral for her. This one I want to study again. Entry shot, audio, Hook, text, editing style, length, all the things. Those are that's stuff that I'm paying attention to and I'm taking
notes on it. Here I have text hook, verbal hook. But we could talk about hooks a little bit more a little bit later in this video, but we're taking notes. I noticed this. Maybe I could try this. So you can take notes here, too. What you're analyzing and noticing. Or let's go to Instagram for example. If I wanted to do, let's say, running Tips. What the Try again. Running for beginners. And let's say this is my niche neighbor. Somebody in my industry that I'm like, "Yes, I want to create like them. I want to post
similar content to them." Again, I'm going to look at their followers with 164,000 followers. Just going to go to the reals tab and see what is viral for this creator. again paying attention to view counts and his average views look like somewhere between 20 maybe like 20,000. So I want to find something that's above that like maybe double that or more. So here we go. We have two videos over the 200,000 view mark. So these might be good to add to my list of how to start running common running for mistakes. So, those would be
stuff I would add to my content calendar, save to a collection, return back, and um create my own version of. This is not the only thing you can do to study your niche neighbors. Not only can you study Content that is performing well for them, because if this your niche neighbor, let's say you want to do running content, your niche neighbor is making running content, then it's very likely that their audience is also going to be your audience. That's why we're studying them because if it resonates with their audience, it'll probably attract and resonate the
right audience for you as well. So, something else you could pay attention to instead of just Content that's performing well for them, you can actually go to a video and go to the comment section and check to see what sort of questions people have in the comment section. It looks like there's a comment here that says, "I need help with shin splints. they are killing my ability to run. I could make a video on how to deal with shin splints or how to prevent shin splints, how to recover from shin splints. So, that alone gives
me like three video ideas Just from reading that comment or going to the comment section. I could also pay attention to their website and how they are making money. If you're somebody who you don't quite know how you want to make money as a content creator yet, you can look at your niche neighbors and look to see what sort of services they're offering or if they're doing paid partnerships or selling digital products. Just study their link in bio and looks like they have a running app And maybe their freebie is like a half marathon challenge.
So ask yourself, could I do something similar? Is that the route that I want to go down? and just look at a bunch of niche neighbors and you'll find a lot of clarity there or direction there. You can do the same strategy over on YouTube when going to someone's videos is of their recent videos which ones are popping off and then which ones so it looks like 1 million but that's using Ryan and I Don't have a Ryan Trean. So yeah, anything that's like with Ryan Tran, which like by the way, love Ryan Trean as
a YouTuber if you don't already follow him. I think the best YouTuber at the moment, setting a best example of what it's like to be a YouTuber. He uses his phone in all of his videos and they're high quality. They're amazing. So definitely check him out. This a good one. This one is a good one. So you would look at similar strategy. Look at Their profile. look to see of the recent videos, what's viral for them, or even like sort by popular to see what's their most popular ones. Make sure you only focus on like
the ones from the last one to two years and then see if you could recreate it. But I will say something that I notice a lot of my students do and the mistake that they make when studying niche neighbors, whether it's Instagram, YouTube, or Tik Tok, is they'll actually choose viral creators Like Haley to study. And that's not necessarily what we want to do yet. We don't want to study people who are already viral established 3.8 million followers. Obviously, they have done something amazing to get here. But let's go to oldest. She's been on this
journey for seven years. So, her growth strategy probably looked different than her current maintaining posting frequency strategy. So, you actually want to try to find people that are currently in Their growth strategy phase or maybe somewhere under 500,000 followers. That's kind of the range that I would go for is like who is currently growing. They're in that growth strategy. They're applying these concepts. They aren't already established. For example, let's see if she's still there. So, Cat Stickler, the content that she created to grow her account is likely not the content she's creating now. So, I
wouldn't study her recent post and be Like, "Oh, I need to make this. This is what I have to be making." Because she's already established she might not be trying to implement like growth right now. Not to say that's never the case. But in general, you'll see the best results if you're studying creators who are actively growing, trying to grow in that strategy phase as opposed to creators who have been established for years and already have millions of followers because they might not be Following any sort of strategy. So, I kind of want to jump
into video packaging, specifically hook layering first because this is like that first element that you will learn and study as a content creator when crafting your videos. Because now that you have this list of ideas of like, okay, I can make coffee recipes, I can make a coffee bar station video, I can make a coffee vlog. Like now that you have like a general idea. How do you practically create said Video? Well, first thing you want to study hooks and not just like what somebody is doing in the first few seconds, but there's three elements
of a hook that you want to study. And this is something that hook layering I discovered two and a half maybe three years ago. I did a deep dive video studying viral short form content. And when I was trying to figure out what is a viral hook, I figured out that viral hooks actually layer three different Hook elements. Like I've heard so many different things, but really what it comes down to, there's three parts of hook layering. You have the visual hook, the text hook, and the audio hook. You want to use all three. All
three. We want to be thinking about all three of these in those first one to three seconds of your video. To do this, you're going to ask yourself with the visual hook, what will the viewer see that will capture their attention? With The text hook, you're going to ask yourself, what will the viewer read that will capture their attention? And with the audio hook, you're going to ask yourself, what will the viewer hear that's going to capture their attention? And if you could layer all three of these things in the first few seconds, you're master
at hook layering. The seeing element is the visual, like the actual first frame, the video, the shot, the is it lighting, is it what someone's Wearing? Is it what they're holding? Are they stirring their coffee? Are they making a dessert while talking? So the hook layering is like visually what is happening to capture someone's attention and keep their attention. Text is the text on screen. As soon as you see a video, if there's text on screen, that's the text hook. What text is that? And yeah, what is the viewer reading that's going to capture their
attention? Then audio is the audible, the listening, the Hearing. Is it a trending audio? Is it somebody saying something to the camera? Is it a voice over? So verbally, what is someone saying? Now I want to show you typically the similar to YouTube. With YouTube, we talked about how the thumbnail and title the text is not really going to be the same because you don't want to waste real estate, right? And say the same thing in two places. The thumbnail stops the scroll and then the text kind of summarizes what the Video is about. That's
kind of a similar strategy with the hook layering. The text on screen is not going to be the same thing that you say out loud. For example, let me actually just erase all this. Hook text. The hook text says, "How to edit aesthetic photos in under five minutes." This is kind of summarizing what the video is about or what somebody if they watch to the end of the video, this is what they will gain. And then verbally though, what I Say is not this is how to edit aesthetic photos in 95. No, no, no, no.
I don't say that. Verbally. I say if you want your photos to go from this to this, here's how I do it. Or here's how I edited this photo to go from this to this in under five minutes, you know? So, it complements the hook text, but it's not identical to the hook text. And then visually, we had an animation going and there's like a typing sound effect. And then immediately after the t sound, I had a popup and a popup. It was like right. So within those first three seconds, not only do we haveation,
we have a sound effect. We have popup with a sound effects. And then closed captioning is down here. So there's a lot happening in those first three seconds to capture attention. So how can you apply hook layering? That's what you're going to study. When you are studying and doing your content research, you could study and do content Research just to get content ideas like this. Or when you do, let's do coffee at home. When you're doing this part of it, you are now starting to pay attention to okay, what's the hook text? What's those first
few clips? And you're going to take notes on that. So, I am going to see Oh, morning iced coffee routine. That's nice. Let's see. 3 days ago. 51,000 followers, 13,000 views. All right. Lacy has 31,000 followers. Ooh, 122,000 views. Okay, let's study this One. We have honey vanilla bean iced latte. No syrups needed. This is another coffee recipe. So, I'm going to do the hook text is honey vanilla bean iced latte. Honey, vanilla, bean, iced latte. No syrups needed. I have verbal hook here, but that's like audio. What is playing? Let's turn the volume up.
>> Okay, so it's just an audio. So, I could actually like save this audio. Peace. >> See if I could find it. Okay. And then the visual hook is the espresso pouring. And so I'm just gonna document that espresso pouring closeup into latte. So now that visual hook is the same visual hook that I want to do in my own version. So maybe this is the visual hook that I use for my salted maple shake and espresso because it looks like that worked. And then I could use a currently trending audio to kind of pair
everything together. So that's hook layering. That is just one element of video packaging. Something else to consider and pay attention to when you're doing your content research are the different types of video formats that you will come across. And this is again going to help you decide, okay, what's going to be the best way to deliver my video idea or piece of information. We have about five formats that are the most common formats people create their content under. We have face to camera like this. I am talking to the camera face to face, you And
me. This could be educational videos. It could be vlogs where you're talking to the camera. It could be storytelling where you're just like, "Oh my gosh, the craziest thing just happened to me." You could be giving a tip or something that you learned. You were listening to a podcast and had a revelation. Pull your phone out like you're on FaceTime with a friend and you're talking to the camera. Super casual. So, you have face to camera. That's an option. Next we have voice over. This is when you have obviously your voice recording over the video
that is playing. Again, this could be storytelling, it could be educational, inspirational, could be a vlog talking through your day, what you did, issues you ran into. So voice over style. Then you have B-roll with trending audio. And then usually there's a text hook. So, A-roll, mainframe, B-roll is like the show, don't tell. And so, it's like Clips of you at the gym, working out, doing laundry. You're not really talking to the camera. It's just clips of things. Coffee, typing on a keyboard, B-roll. So, you have a B-roll paired with a trending audio, and then
text. We usually see these in like a 7-second format. Or it could be like a entire morning routine in a 30- secondond aesthetic coffee vlog or something. There's no talking, no voice over. it's just relying on the music. You also have Reaction based content or even like stitches, duets where you're reacting to other people's content. Even if you're doing green screen videos where maybe an article came out of something relevant in your industry, you could talk and react to the article or the thing event that is happening. Reply or stitch other creators content. Do you
agree, disagree with the video? So you have reaction content and then we also have like the lip sync if there's a trending audio and You're like liping whatever the audio says or even like just dance trends lip-syncing trends those are kind of all I kind of put into one thing. So there's lots of different video formats that you could deliver your content in. And then another thing that you can think about when it comes to video packaging is the value that you will be delivering within the video. So I like to think that there are
four main different ways to deliver value. You have and I call them value Pillars, but you have educational content, entertaining, inspirational, and relatable. Now, I know this is like a lot. So, let me just say these are all options. And what I want you to do is to try all of the options. Try everything. I think that is one of the biggest mistakes that I see creators and my students making is they will find one video format and one value pillar that works for them or that they feel comfortable with and they will Just stick
to that and then they'll only do that for like 30 to 60 posts and they'll they'll come to me and be like Millie I'm not growing what's going on they look at their profile I give them an audit and I'm like well you are sticking to B roll style videos, 7-second videos with a trending audio and text and it's inspirational. It's like motivational quotes and that is all you've been doing for two months. You got to change it up. So, that is one of The biggest mistakes that I see people make. And the reason I'm
I'm sharing all of this is not to overwhelm or confuse and be like, "Oh my gosh, I have to do all of these. Oh my goodness." Like, you don't have to do them all all the time. But when you're in these initial phases of growing and trying to figure out what's going to connect with your audience, I want to show you that there's the options are endless. And that's an exciting thing, not a scary Thing. It's exciting because you're like, if you did one video and you're talking through, here's my salted maple ice latte recipe
and talking to the camera didn't work. You can make the same thing. This time, do voice over. Just record yourself making it and then do a voiceover talking how to make a salt and maple blah blah blah blah blah. Okay, if that didn't work, fine. Shorten it again. Make it like a 10-second quick little thing with like text saying salt And maple ice latte recipe parenthesis no syrups needed recipe and caption. It's like a quick 10-second aesthetic with an aesthetic trending audio. You It's the same video idea just delivered in so many different ways. And
so it's really cool that all the outside of the box thinking that you get to do when you play with different video formats. Same thing with the value pillars. If you are creating coffee content, how can you create coffee content that's Educational? How can you create coffee content that's entertaining? Britney does an amazing job at that because her vlogs are so fun and fast-paced and the editing is great. The transitions are phenomenal. So, she does educational because she teaches different recipes, but she also does entertaining. And then, how do you make coffee content that's inspirational?
She has this storytelling where she's like, "Okay, a year ago from today, I got this espresso Machine and now I have 10,000 followers and it's like this inspirational, aspirational, like, oh my gosh, that's so cool. That's motivating. I want to do that." And how do you make relatable coffee content? Oh, you threw the milk up in the air and then it fell to the floor and it's spilled everywhere. So like that it just opens your mind to see all the different options and ways that you can create content. And so these are not to overwhelm.
I don't want you to See see these and go, "Oh my gosh, I have to do all these." No, these are just tools that you can keep in your back pocket and when you're feeling stuck, you could come back to these tools and go, "Okay, what do I need to change up? What do I need to dabble with today? H when's the last time I did face to camera when I was talking to the camera. Oh, I haven't. Let me try that. When's the last time I tried an educational piece of content? That is Just
like my little spiel. There's so many different ways to create content, even with one video idea. I did a whole video on this, too, where it was like turning one vlog into 10 pieces of content. And so, that's another video that I can put in the card. But, it's it's fun. It's exciting. It lets you explore so many options. And yeah, we'll we'll talk a little bit more about piecing all of this together. At the end, this will all click together. So, I'm just like wanting to show you all these little things and at the
end, I'll show you how to piece everything together to come up with a solid brand strategy for your content creator goals. So, it'll all click. But now that you have your content calendar, and by the way, this content calendar is really cool. I have these were other examples that I did in another video. But what's really cool is like when you have an idea that you want to do, you can click And drag it to like okay cool. I'm going to prep this and now like oh I'm going to move this one to editing and
so everything is like drag and dropable. And then also if you have dates on anything I have the content calendar set up so that it automatically syncs to the calendar view. So if I change the date to this coffee recipe to March 9th and then we go back now March 9th it is appear it has appeared on the calendar. Ideally you do have a content calendar Because it helps again with the batching ahead if you're a batch ahead type of a person or even brainstorming. I think brainstorming in a calendar format or somewhere other than
a notes app helps keep all your thoughts organized because you could really analyze hooks and editing and pacing pillars, all the things. So that's why I like to use more of a dashboard like this instead of a notes app. But once you have some ideas ready to go, content ready to create, You'll probably want to know, okay, how often do I post? That's a question we're briefly going to touch on because I get it all the time. The key word here and you are going to hate it is consistency. Yay. All you have to do
is post consistently. The end. What does consistency mean? Notice consistency isn't the definition isn't post every day. Yeah, posting every day is a form of consistency, but ideally you want to be a content Creator, full-time content creator, you need to find a frequency and posting cadence that works for you and your specific lifestyle. If you have a full-time job and seven kids, posting every day might not be realistic. That might not work out for you. Maybe it does. I don't know. But what matters at the end of the day is finding a schedule that you
can realistically stick to for the next year. If you were to go allin for the next year, what's something Realistically you could stick to for a year? And when I say realistically stick to, I want to rephrase that. What is the minimum posts per week you think you could do for a year? Minimum. Not like, oh yeah, I'm feeling good. Let's do every day. It's like, okay, well, if I'm sick or if it's that time of month or if I'm having a bad week, I think I could probably but I could do three posts. So
ask yourself, what is your minimum posts per week that you can do? Because with That as your set schedule, let's say that's three posts a week, Monday, Wednesday, Friday. With that as your set schedule, that means other four days, the world is your oyster. You can still post on those days, but if you don't post those days, no biggie, because your consistency is Monday, Wednesday, Friday. You're always posting every Monday, Wednesday, Friday to Tik Tok. And then those other days, you have maybe there's a trend and you're like, "Oh, I want to hop on this
trend. Let me do this real quick. Post it on a Saturday. Be crazy." That's that's what I do. My team and I, our posting schedule for Instagram and Tik Tok is Monday, Wednesday, Friday. We leave Tuesdays and Thursdays open for trends or for brand collaborations. If a brand comes to us and they're like, "Hey, do you actually have room to fit this collaboration into like your content calendar two weeks from now?" We usually Leave Tuesdays and Thursdays open just in case a collab comes up. So, minimum posts per week. Now, I will say typically what
we hear, we hear on Instagram if you could post three to five reals per week. On Tik Tok, everybody says one post a day. And then YouTube the average is one long form video per week. That is just like the average. I'm not saying that is the way to be successful. It's it's just the average of what like People have said works well, but it's not needed. The last thing you want to do is say you're going to post every day and burn yourself out and then quit and then stop posting for five months. Because
the the cool thing with consistency is not only is it great for the algorithm and it's great for your audience because they follow you and they know they can expect from you, but also brand collaboration wise, you're going to get more opportunities for PR And collabs when you're posting consistently because brands when they're deciding who to work with, they're looking at how often you're posting. And I'm not saying they look to make sure you're posting every day. They look to see, has this creator been consistent in their upload schedule for the past few months, three
months, right? But if they see you post for two weeks and then you stop for two months and then you post for two weeks and then you stop for two Months, doesn't matter if you posted every day for two weeks. They want to see, oh, this person posts three times a week. They've been doing that for six months. I know I could rely on them to send them PR, work with them, collab with them. They are serious. they're a serious content creator. So, that's like the perk of consistency. The creators that are the most successful
are creators who found a way to implement content creation into their day-to-day Lifestyle. I think that's like the secret of being a content creator is finding a way to blend content creation into your day-to-day life. For me, I had them separated for a long time of like, okay, there's content creator Millie and then there's real life Millie. And that's fine to do. That worked for me for about four or five years. But now that I am a mom and I have a baby, it's harder for me to separate the two and separate time for, okay,
I carve out Time for content creation. Now, I have to figure out how can I just add content creation into my day-to-day flow. That's why I started posting coffee videos because I'm like, I make coffee every day. I need to be filming and have content ready to go. So, I'm just going to start filming what I'm already doing. So, I think the most successful content creators, creators who have been doing this for the longest, they have found ways to implement every phase of the Content creator process, filming, editing, scheduling, posting, coming up with ideas. They
found ways to implement that into their routines, their weekly routines, their monthly routines, their daily routines, and just overall new habits, just like going to the gym. That's kind of what content creation becomes. It becomes a lifestyle, a habit to film, a habit of a routine of, okay, I edit my videos with my morning coffee. So, your frequency will just depend on You, your lifestyle, and how you're layering and implementing content creation into your day-to-day life, and what works well for you. Now, as you're posting, you're likely going to be doing some analytic check-ins. These
are super important. It's going to guide you on your future content, tell you what's working, what isn't working, or could be improved on. And these are what I like to do every 30 days. And I still do this every 30 days because the fun thing About being a content creator is like once you lock in and you find a video style that works, it's only going to work for some time because interests change, social media changes, and you and your content are always going to be evolving and growing and innovating. So, I do analytic check-ins
every 30 days. If your goal is growth, that's what we're focusing on in this video. There's other goals like making money, increasing engagement, Etc., etc., but growth. I want to go to content you shared. This is my professional dashboard. We're going to filter over the last maybe 3 months. Filter, and we're going to sort by metric. I want to see what content is getting me the most followers. It looks like an edits tutorial, brand collaboration example, and this cool how to turn one video into 10 posts hack. I'm looking at top videos. It looks like
brand collabs are a common theme. We Have brand collab, brand collab, PR, making money, video engagement. And I'm also going to scroll to the bottom because I'm curious like what doesn't get followers because that's also important to know. I don't care about stories. I just want to see my reals follows. Okay. So, the ones that don't bring in followers are like the personal stuff. So, my last November to this November one, little reminder, making Thanksgiving meal in a bag donations, Inspirational content, relatable content. Those aren't getting like follows, but my educational stuff on brand collaborations
and making money. Those get me follows. So, if my goal is to get more followers, I'm going to focus on making more videos similar to this as opposed to the inspirational, relatable stuff. Doesn't mean they don't perform well. It just means again, if my goal is growth, we're going to focus on the thing that is bringing us growth. I Typically do my content research and analytic check-ins once a month and I'm always planning the next month to come or I'm one month ahead when planning for content. So that is going to be your content strategy
for growing organically across platforms. I know I focus mostly on short form content. Feel like that is mostly where my followers and viewers are interested in. So again, if you're interested in YouTube, I have plenty of YouTube growth strategies on my YouTube Channel or videos related to that on my YouTube channel. And also, I have a full YouTube course that's inside the BSP model and it teaches everything YouTube for sake of time and I've already been filming for 5 hours. We're going to jump to profit. Now, there are lots of ways to make money as
a content creator. You have UGC, user generated content, making merch, platform monetization, brand collaborations, affiliates, digital products, Having a membership, offering some sort of like coaching, I mean, even even courses. So, there's a lot of different income stream options. We want to finish that. Okay. For this video though, I want to focus on like the top three that students are usually the most interested in. So, we are going to talk about brand collabs, digital products, and platform monetization. I will say affiliates and UGC are probably the secondary most popular income streams that people are Interested
in. I have videos on both of these things. So you could go to my channel and again these income streams I have they're fully fleshed out and taught in the BSP model. But for sake of time and my Apple pen dying, we're just going to talk about the three most common ones. Starting with platform monetization, let's talk about Instagram. When it comes to just Instagram specific monetization tools, you have badges, You have gifts. subscriptions or membership bonuses and then of course you could like sell your product with your link in bio or land brand collaborations
but I'm talking platform monetization tools specifically these are the four and eligibility is going to vary depending on each individual income stream so like badges you have to have 10,000 followers to get access to its you only need 500 followers to have Access to it so the eligibility ility will vary depending on the tool or feature. Then we have Tik Tok. Tik Tok you have a lot more options. You have the creator fund, Tik Tok shop, subscriptions or memberships. Again, series, video gifts, live rewards, Tik Tok one, incentive programs. I spelled that wrong. and even
like work with artists but that's like specific to artists etc. Again eligibility will vary depending on country follower count or Depending on feature. So like creator fund I think you have to have 10,000 followers. Tik Tok shop you have to have 1,000 followers to promote within Tik Tok shop or 5,000 to promote other sellers. So eligibility will vary. And then of course our big kahuna, our lovely YouTube monetization which I love. They have ad revenue. So that's like when ads play on this video, you get a percentage of it. And then membership options, Supers or
gifting, YouTube shopping, so you could link products in your videos. It's kind of like affiliates and player for education. Now YouTube monetization. And I'm just going to read off of my notes here because there's two different tiers. There's audience funded income, which is like supers and memberships. So, it's where your audience are kind of paying. You can get access to that or qualify for that. When you hit 500 subscribers, You have 3,000 watch hours in the last 12 months. So, 500 subs and then 3,000 watch hours. Or if you're focusing on shorts, you need 30
or three million shorts views in the last 30 days. So that unlocks fan funding. Then to get access to like the main monetization, you do need 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours in the last 12 months. And then that gives gives you access to all monetization on YouTube. Honestly, I really don't think Instagram's monetization is that good. I've never heard good things. I don't have a good experience with it. I have never heard of an Instagram creator being like, "Yeah, I make all of my money on Instagram monetization." It's usually like brand collaborations or selling
digital products. But I do hear people saying they are making full-time incomes with both Tik Tok and YouTube. If platform monetization is your goal, one Of these two are going to be your best bet. If you're a short form creator, Tik Tok. If you're a long- form creator, YouTube. Because remember, YouTube is going to take you a little bit longer, but the monetization is pretty good, pretty high over here. Tik Tok's quicker. It'll work best with like Tik Tok shop here and even like maybe live. So, again, depends on your goals. Now, let's move on
to my personal favorite and that is creating a digital product. I personally think every single creator can benefit from selling their own digital products. Just like having a freebie, offering a digital product is going to be so so so powerful. because it's you can set it up in a way where it's passive income. You create it one time, you put it in your link in bio and it's constantly generating revenue for you as you grow. My personal favorite way to set up your digital product is if you have a freebie, you can set up an
Email automation so that people are upsold to your paid digital product. Let's say this is like a $29 product. Anytime somebody downloads your freebie, you set up a sequence in standtore where they get to the delivery email, right? They're like, "Hey, here's your freebie. Woo!" And then maybe like a day later, they get a little educational email about, let's say, this freebie is 50 hooks to increase engagement on your Instagram reels, right? This one is Here's some extra tips for going making viral reels. And then this one is like a testimonial of here's how Jess
grew 100,000 followers on Instagram in less than six months. And then you have like this boom. If you want to create viral reels, here is a $29 mini course that's going to teach you how to grow to 100,000 followers. Right? So like this digital product relates to the freebie which was like 50 reels hooks to increase engagement and then ultimately People probably want more followers. Naturally they're connected that way. You never really have to sell because some people don't like selling but you have the emails do it for you and all of that is just
set up again in your stand store. digital product approach is going to be similar to a freebie approach where it's like oh identify a problem create a solution knowing that people will always pay for convenience. Let's do some examples together. Industry Problem solution. If we're in the social media industry, specifically content creator tips like myself, maybe a problem that people face, they have a hard time landing brand collaborations or they don't know how to even work with brands, how the heck to set their rates or anything. Maybe my initial solution, land collab solution is okay,
here's some free pitch templates. Here are how you can write emails and land brand collaborations. Pitch email templates. So that's the free solution. And then later, the more advanced solution or transformation I could offer them is like a collab master bundle. This is going to be everything you need to land brand collaborations. Not only is this going to be extra pitch templates, but it's also going to show examples of how those pitches were used, negotiation email templates. It's also going to have a rates calculator and a dashboard like a notion calendar to track all Collaborations
so that you could stay organized and grow your income as a content creator landing brand collaborations. So this is the one that I could charge for. Same painpoint brand collabs. We solve the initial interest which is okay, how do I land them? Pitch templates. Okay, well like now that you're landing them, what else? Well, you need to learn how to negotiate. You need to learn how to set your rates. You need to organize your brand collapse. So, this is like that initial pain point, that entry point of okay, let me solve this one thing for
you and then that's going to probably lead to more problems down the line and you're going to need answers to those. So, the paid one is going to be down the line here is how to solve the rest of that problem. That is one example. Another example, let's say you are in the gardening niche or industry. Solution or problem somebody faces is they never know what Soil to use when repotting plants or plant planting se the seasonal seeds. They never know what soil to use. So, your solution, maybe you have like a soil recipe book,
which is actually a thing, recipe book with over like 20 different soil options depending on what the person is planting, repotting, etc. Indoor, outdoor, all the things. This could be the free thing. It helps with that first pain point. It's like soil planting, right? That first pain point. And then down the line, that'll probably open up other pain points even though you know the soil. Okay. Well, now how do you actually care for the plant? It's going to be a full plant care guide. Never kill another plant again. Right? That's like the subtitle. And this
is going to include how to identify different pot sizes, when to plant certain plants depending on the season, lighting, watering, making sure a plant doesn't Die, how to identify how to fix a plant if it's dying, like identifying different issues. So, it's like a full plant care guide. Again, you could work on like craft the title to make it sound even catchier with Chacha BT, but this is kind of how my brain works when creating a digital product is the freebie helps with that first painoint. Somebody wants it. They're like, "This is what I want
right now." It might not be like what they need, but they want It. And then this is going to deliver on the rest of the need and the rest of the path. for tools with creating your digital product. Canva, my students and I, we've all used Canva for creating digital products and then of course set it up and sell it through Stan. That setup is literally so easy. You go to your store, new product, sell digital product, you set your price, you upload your file, boom, shakalaka, you're able to make money, it shows up in
your stand Store, and you get 100% of whatever. That's one of the things that I love about Stan is there's a lot of other link and bio tools that actually charge per transaction. So, if you're selling something for $27, that link in bio tool will actually take 10% or whatever percentage of every transaction. Whereas with Stan Store, you're paying $29 a month and if somebody buys a $27 product, you get the $27. So, that's what I love about that. Of course, they Have another tier for like creating the pro version, which is I think $99
a month. That's for the advanced email automations and funnels. But if you just want to set up your Stan store, set up your freebie, set up your digital product to sell, set up, make money, $29 a month. No, this video is not sponsored by Stan. I have worked with them in the past and I am like an ambassador for them and I've been since the beginning of time. I just genuinely love what They're doing. I believe in their product. Now, we'll talk about how to make money with your digital product in a second, but what
I want to first talk about, identifying what to make as a digital product can be the same process as identifying what to make for a freebie, using Pinterest, studying your niche neighbors, seeing what they are selling, and ask yourself is if that's something you want to sell or even the answer can come from your audience. I Have a student who she's in like the growth phase where she's just getting started on YouTube and she's just creating vlog content there and right now she's just not able to come up with the right digital product. It just
doesn't feel right for her. And that's okay because I think as you grow sometimes the answer will come from your audience themselves. They will ask you, hey, how do you do XYZ? or oh my gosh, I need all the products you recommend for Curly hair because she does curly hair content. And so maybe her freebie is going to be that list of like all the products you need for curly hair and then like the order in which to apply them. So that could be the free product, but those ideas can come over time. It might
not be something that you set up right now. It might be something that you set up later, but the sooner the better because the sooner your income streams are set up, the sooner you're Going to be making money. So that's why I like to be thinking about monetization in the beginning. That way if you have that clarity of knowing what you want to make money for, you can set that up and start that from the very beginning. It doesn't matter how many followers you have, you can start making money. But um sometimes that clarity doesn't
come until a little bit later. All right, let's talk about working brand collabs. We have changed batteries on everything Like 500 times. We are in the home stretch. Everything is dying. cameras, mics, iPad, pencil. Okay, iPad's not too bad, but the pencil keeps dying. So, we're gonna make the most and keep doing as much as we can before everything goes kaput. When it comes to brand collaborations, there's some tips that you can implement to get started with working with brands. So, let's first talk about how to get started and getting on brands radars. So, let's
say Getting started. You want to get free lenses, start making content with your Sony camera about lenses. If you don't have them, do the green screen screenshot talking about different lenses and product reviews. Start creating content now that's going to capture the brand's attention. You can even tag the brand in your content that you're creating. For example, for me, I totally manifested this, but I wanted a new espresso machine. And I had started Posting coffee content on my It's Modern Millie Tik Tok and Instagram. And coffee has obviously nothing to do with teaching content creators
how to make content. But like I had said, I needed to figure out a way to integrate content creation to my lifestyle. So, I started filming my morning coffee. And instead of like coffee tips, coffee recipes, I started storytelling and sharing how I got started as a content creator, creator tips that I wish I knew when I Was getting started. And just from creating these creator tips series videos through visual coffee content, I got sent a new espresso machine because the brand's like, "Hey, we want you to use this espresso machine in your content." So
create the content now that you want to capture brand's attention. Even the first big name brand that I worked with, I only landed the collaboration because I kept tagging them and engaging with them on socials. It was on Instagram. I had just hit 10,000 followers and it was Forever 21. At the time, I was doing portrait modeling. I wasn't teaching content creation. I was doing portrait modeling and I was always wearing Forever 21. So, I tagged them in every single post where I was wearing their clothes. And if they posted something on their stories, I
was replying to their stories. I was commenting on their content and sure enough I get a collab with Forever 21 And I get $500 to buy whatever the heck I want at the store and post about it. That was literally it. So that's what you need to do. You need to start creating content now relevant to the collabs that you want and don't be afraid to tag the brand. Mention them in your stories. Post about the content, the brands that you love now. If there's a specific face serum that you love, post about it now.
make content about it. Now, when brands see that you're Already creating branded content, they're more likely to want to work with you. And same with your audience. If you're already talking about products that you love, it's not going to be whiplash to your audience. When you get a brand collab because they're like, "Oh, yeah, Sally May already talks about the her favorite coffee syrups. Oh, it makes sense that this brand partnered with her because she's been talking about these coffee syrups for a dang Long time." So tag them, create content now, start talking about it,
share your favorite products. That is how you practice and build the skill of creating content that feels organic and natural when relevant to products and brands instead of like you never create a branded thing ever. You never talk about your favorite products and then you get this brand that's like we want you to talk about our tea and then you're like sitting there with their tea and you're Like I don't know how to talk about a product to my audience. This is my favorite tea. and then you don't know what to do because you hadn't
been practicing. So, start creating. Now, we already talked about consistency before, so that's important. I'll put it here just as the reminder. We also talked about putting your email in your link in your bio. So, put your email in bio. There are third-party tools that brands use to scout out content creators. And Those third party tools, they're often on their laptop desktop. And what they could do is they could filter by creators who have emails listed or they could even just search dot com. And anyone who has do in their bio will appear in search
results. It doesn't matter if you have the email button on your Instagram profile because when you're on desktop, if they go to your Instagram profile, they don't see the email button. They don't have any way to Contact you if your email is not in your bio. Make sure your email is easy to find, easy to access. Same thing with Tik Tok. Same thing on YouTube. Make sure it's public and easy to access. Now, another thing that you could do is to join third party platforms. I talked about how brands use third-party tools and platforms to
scout out content creators. There are third party platforms for you as a content creator where you could apply to campaigns and Apply to brand collaboration opportunities. My favorite is Aspire IQ. This is the platform where I landed my first paid brand collaboration ever. And I've landed multiple collabs through Aspire IQ paid. My first paid collab was like not great, not authentic. I just said yes to it because I was like, "Oh my gosh, it's paid." It was like a skinny tea product, which regrets. Don't just say yes because it's money. That's silly. But then I
ended up getting what Was another paid one I did? Hippies the stats. Oh my gosh. love hippies and the paid partnerships that I did multiple that I did with them was through Aspire. Another one is #paid. There's popular pay. There's obviously ly. And then if you are just interested in UGC specifically, you have join brands. That's a really good one. Honestly though, just from doing these three, you can automatically start getting PR and partnerships. This one Will help increase the chances of getting those opportunities for paid partnerships because those will often come via email. And
then this is just like that extra cherry on top. If you're not seeing a lot of traction, you can absolutely do the third party platforms. Now, when you're comfortable and you have some videos under your belt where you're like, "Yeah, I'm comfortable talking about products in my content, you can pitch to brands, too. The Conversion of landing a paid collab on a first pitch is low, but pitching is a great way to make connections and introduce yourself to a brand, get your foot in the door with the brand. It's not to, oh, I'm going to
land a paid collab just from pitching this brand." That's not the intention. is to create connections and see if there's a space for you to work with the brand in the future. Let's talk about pitching for a second. When it comes to pitching, if You like really want to get the ball rolling, typically you could send and schedule 10 pitches every single week. And again, the intention is not to make money. is to create a genuine connection with a brand and genuinely ask, is there a way I can support you with your business goals right
now? Are you exploring influencer marketing? Do you have upcoming campaigns that I can assist with? I saw that you recently launched this product. Is that something That would be helpful to post to my audience about? So, it's genuinely wanting to help and spread the word. Pitching comes from a more authentic place when it's a brand that you already love and use and post about and you can use that as proof in a pitch. I'm going to pop a free pitch template that I have used in the past to create connection. It works. It's like a
timeless one. It always works and it's a great way to get your foot in the door and introduce Yourself to brands. And like I said, you're maybe pitching 10 brands a week. You're not expecting a response, okay? You don't have to do 10 brands a week either. It could be like five brands a week. So let's say five to 10 brands a week if you like pitching in brand clubs is your main goal. You're pitching maybe 5 to 10 times a week and you're sending the emails probably I would say on like a Tuesday or
a Wednesday, maybe earlier in the morning because Monday they're Catching up from the weekend. Friday they don't want to respond to anybody. So Tuesday, Wednesday is kind of like the sweet spot and I would say probably before a lunch break. So figure out where that business is based. Figure out the time zone and then make sure you're sending your pitches before someone's lunch break because after lunch we're snoozing. We don't want to be productive. So ideally it's like a morning pitch that you're scheduling to Auto send. And then when you pitch, don't do attachments, friends.
Okay? No attachments. That is how your stuff ends up in spam, in junk. You could do hyperlinks instead. Like if you want to hyperlink to your Tik Tok or your Instagram page, that's great. I want you to keep it short and sweet, like three paragraphs, three to four paragraphs. And by paragraphs, I don't mean there's like 20 sentences per paragraph. Maybe there's like three to five sentences per Paragraph. Short, sweet, to the point. And again, you are going in with a servicebased mindset. Okay? How can you help the brand? That is a successful partnership when
you work together on a main goal as opposed to what can I get from you? Can you send me free stuff? Can you pay mesh? That's not what we're doing. Brand collaborations are the most successful and brands will keep coming back to you if you are always working with them to Achieve said goal. Now, something I forgot to touch on was the fact that brands love a targeted audience. They love a targeted audience. If you your audience is moms and they are like a postpartum workout set brand, oh, they're going to love to work with
you because your audience is exactly their audience. So having a very specific audience and a demographic of maybe like US-based or citybased or knowing your ratios of like demographic, male, Female, country, all the things knowing those demographics are huge pulls for brands because you could show them be like hey guess what my audience is literally your audience and that's why we can work together. So that is something I had forgot to mention on the how to get started what's important for brands what they look for. When it comes to how much to charge, there is
no set standard. Unfortunately, I think the kind of what people say is they say to Charge 1 cent per your follower number, but that doesn't take into account like I don't know your experience as a content creator or even your expertise. Like if you are a certified, you've been a certified fitness coach and you've been coaching for 15 years, that doesn't take into account your certifications, your level of expertise, your not only experience as a content creator and working with brands, but your expertise level in your field doesn't take into Account the time that it
takes for you to create said content. So I I don't love this method. I it just doesn't calculate everything that you need. So I actually have something average impact level times follower number plus contract terms. This is kind of the general formula that I use. Again, it is not the only way. There's no set formula. This is just like a starting point that I use because I feel like it works best to calculating all of your Different levels of expertise. So, let's say you have 10,000 followers and then you want to figure out what your
average impact rate level is, which I could talk about brand collaborations for literally hours, but I don't have hours. Follow number times average impact level. Plus, you need to know how to read a contract. So, you're going to want contract terms. Average impact level. This takes into account your engagement rate because brands do look at that. It takes into Account your experience with brand collaborations, your expertise, and your impact. How well known are you in your industry right now? So, like on a scale of one to five, how good is your engagement rate? This is
like very tight. I'm kind of breezing through this because I have a whole video deep diving on this formula. So, if you want like a full deep dive video on the formulas, I have like platform specific videos, an Instagram one, how to calculate your rates for Instagram, Tik Tok, YouTube. I have videos on all those again free on my channel because each platform is a little different. Like for YouTube, there's long form collabs and then there's shorts and then there's also like integrations, which is a 30 to 60 second mention in a YouTube video. But
then there's also a dedicated YouTube partnership, which means they want the whole video to be it. But then there's Also like an another type of integration where it's like two minutes. So there's again so many different things that go into it, but this is kind of the summary. On a scale of one to five, how great is your engagement rate? Let's say it's a two. What's your experience level with collabs? Never done collabs. Your expertise pretty solid. Impact not well known. Add these up. 2 + 2 + 1 is five. There are you finding the
average. So 5 / 4. Let's do that. Oh, where's 5 / 4? 1.25. So this turn that into a percentage. That's your average impact level. Again, I know math. Boo. That's what you'll multiply followers for a starting base rate 125. This is for the smallest like a a mention starting. and then you're going to add the contract terms. Okay, so this is kind of like the general formula that I use. I have a full breakdown, but I do want to quickly talk about contract terms because I want to Make sure you're not taking advantage of
when working with brands and things to look out for. First thing to look out for is usage rights. This is going to state in a contract who owns the content that you're creating and what they're allowed to do with them. So if the brand wants to obtain usage rights to your content, they could obtain organic rights where it's like, hey, we could post your content to our socials or paid, hey, we could run ads to your Content or full, hey, we can use your content however the heck we want. We could put it on a
billboard. We could put it in ads. We could put it on our website, in our email list. full and the big red flag perpetual. You'll see this as perpetual in perpetuity. This is like, hey, we actually own your content for forever and can do whatever the heck we want with it. So, if you ever see perpetual in perpetuity in a contract, that my Dear is red flag. Red flag. We do not want that. These three you can charge for and you will charge extra for and so these three are fine and usually there's an expiration
date. So it's like oh we want to obtain organic usage for 3 months or we want to run ads to this for 6 months and you will charge for that. We had that 125 as like our starting rate. So if they want paid usage rights you're going to add Paid usage to your price. Now, there's also exclusivity. I love talking about this stuff. Okay, exclusivity. This means that the brand is saying you cannot work with certain competitors. Ideally, in the contract, you ask them to name them specifically. So, if you're working with Colgate toothpaste and
they want 60 days of exclusivity, you want to see in the contract, okay, well, what are those brands that you don't want me to work with? Is it Crest? Is it hello? Is it what have you? So, you're going to ask, okay, can you list out the brands? If it's 60 days of exclusivity, you can charge for that. Typically, 30 days is included because that's just like natural. Like, I'm not going to talk about a competitor in the next 30 days. That doesn't make sense. That's not organic. But anything beyond 30 days, you can charge
for. Okay. I guess another term, this isn't anything that you would necessarily charge for Technically, but deliverables is usually like the the listed content that's being asked of you. So, it's like, oh, we want three reals, two story mentions, and then the reals repurposed to Tik Tok. That's the deliverables. That's the ask. That's what you were going to be delivering to the brand. So, it's just like a good term to know. That's usually what's listed out. It's under the deliverables that you'll be creating for the brand. Something else to pay Attention to is like the
turnaround time or when you need to post a video by. If it's a quick turnaround, say under two weeks, you could usually charge extra for a quick turnaround. Money. And same thing with revisions. How many revisions do they get for free? Check see if that's in the contract because then if if this isn't mentioned anywhere in the contract, you could be going back and forth 10 times and you're like, I have to keep refilming this Because there wasn't a revision clause. So, I used do like up to two revisions included and then after that X
amount per additional revisions. You could even charge extra for if the brand wants you to put their link in your bio. So you could charge extra for that. So all of these things are things to consider and add to your final total. Again, there's no standard set rate. Usually, I'm going to be quite frank and honest with you. Most of the time, content creators are Pulling numbers straight out of thin air, okay? We're making numbers up. And what you charge for one brand might be different from another brand. Full transparency, lady. Where's my phone? My
dog's behind me. Full transparency, let me tell you how much I charged for like a real with one brand versus another brand. For one brand, a real where I was mentioning their product, it was $3,000. For a different brand, and that was because they bundled multiple reels, so It was 3,000 per reel. Another brand, they wanted one singular dedicated reel that they could run ads to for a certain amount of time, and that was $7,000. Another brand, a real was closer to $10,000. Another brand, $3,500. So, it's going to be different depending on all of
these things and even the brand. Like if it's a big name like Forever 21, they may have a budget for a bigger spend and they might have more strict asks versus a smaller brand or a Small business. They may not have the budget and that's okay. You don't have to charge a ton for every single brand collab. But just keep that in mind. Numbers are going to change for every single collaboration. And so what I say to you then is if you're going to be charging for brand collaborations, if you say a number and you're
like, "Cool, this is going to be $300." And a brand's like, "Okay, let's move forward." That is a sign next time you need to charge a Higher rate. Because if they immediately said yes after you said a number, you probably could have gone higher and then negotiated down. So I always say try to say a number that's a little higher because you could always negotiate down. But if you say a hundred, it's harder to go back and ask, "Oh, actually, uh, it's gonna be $500." Now, there's so much that goes into negotiation, too. But this
kind of this basics of rates and what you could charge for some things That you could charge for and how things will affect your pricing. I could talk about brand collaborations for freaking forever, but I did want to wrap everything up with like, okay, how does all this come together? because you've been here with me from the beginning of this video and there's probably some loose ends that I want to tie up and give you like your ultimate strategy that is going to drive the needle forward and move the needle forward for You your business
and make sure that you are stick staying focused and having a business that is realistic to maintain and constantly keeping your business running. So how do you come up with the strategy for that? Okay, there are four main drivers that are going to drive the intention of your content. There's going to be money, right? You need to make money as a content creator. Growing your email list because all of you have an email list. There's going to be Nurturing your audience and making sure people who do follow you are connected or even like growing your
audience. So, there's focusing on your audience and then there's also you making sure you are having fun. you're still creating videos that you want, even if they don't have strategy. So, these are kind of like the four main drivers that really will keep your business running and have your business well-rounded as a content creator. You are going to use these as Like the big picture to lead and guide your content. Now, we talked about different content pillars or content buckets or life interests, right? With content pillars, there was like those subtopics. So, if I teach
social media, it could be like Instagram growth and then how to make money and then how to film, right? Those are the subtopics under content. Let's do my lifestyle example, right? So, if my life pillars or those interests that I had were Coffee, nom life, and workouts, if those are like the pillars that I'm rotating between topicwise, great. We just want to write that down. Then we have our method of delivery. These are we have face to camera, voice over, b-roll, reaction, and then trend. Okay, those are the ones we went over. As a reminder,
our value pillars, we have educational, entertaining, relatable, and Inspirational. This is how you're going to drive your content decisions. Boop. Boop. Okay, first I want you to pick your intention. What do you want to grow? What do you want to focus on? If that is money, let's say one of your income streams is brand collabs. Okay, so I'm going to put brand collab here. You want to make money with brand collaborations. You're going to pick a pillar where you want to do brand collaborations. Let's say for me it was Like that coffee content. And so
I'm going to do a collab video related to coffee. I'm going to choose my format of delivery. Let's do face to camera and it's going to be educational. That is how I'm going to come up with my content. So maybe it's going to be a ooh okay ready a coffee related content where I'm talking to the camera educational that's going to attract brand collabs. I'm gonna do how to use the Ninja Luxe Cafe for the best iced Lattes. Boom. I have a Ninja. So, if I wanted to work with Ninja, boom, it attracts the brand.
I will be sure to tag them. It is coffee related, so it fits in my pillar. I'm going to talk to the camera and talk through how to use the Ninja. And this marks and checks off that educational value pillar. So that's one way to create a piece of content that's going to drive income for my business. Let's do another example. If your goal is to Grow your email list and your freebie is ab separation healing for postpartum women, that kind of fits in like workouts and mom life. So, email list. I'm going to do
workouts. And we already did face to camera, but maybe I want to do like a B-roll with trending audio. And I'm going to have this be inspirational. So, it's going to be maybe like a 7second video with B-roll doing like an ab workout. And the text on screen text hook is going to be Something like POV. You heal your ab separation after having a baby and can finally work out without being in pain again. So that's the POV hook text. And then the caption is call to action to the email list where you're directing people
to download this workbook or this guide. It's going to teach them different exercises that they could do to heal their abs after having a baby. So again, we're just trying to figure out, okay, how can we constantly make Sure every piece of content is being intentional and touching on all of the things that we learned today with audience. There's different approaches to that. So there's like audience growth or audience engagement. We already know growth strategies, but maybe with engagement that is replying to your audience's questions. Maybe they comment on a real and they're like, "Hey,
how do you do this?" You make a video answering that question because it's directly from Your audience. Maybe that's about mom life, balancing mom life with a newborn. And you do it as a voice over and it's a little bit entertaining because it's a vlog, but also educational because you're kind of talking through, okay, this is kind of how I bounce mom life. This is like what my day-to-day looks like. It's vlog style. So that's nurturing your audience by posting about one of your pillars. That is how you can create a sustainable career as a
content Creator. Anytime I'm posting, I'm asking myself, okay, what is the intention with this video? Is this driving traffic to an email list? Is this driving traffic to a course that I have? Is this going to attract brands that I want to work with? Or is this a brand collab post? Right? It's a brand collab post. And then also at the end of the day, you want to make sure you are creating whatever the heck you want. So h layering in and making sure there's Space for you to like it's okay to not have strategy
sometimes. And you got really inspired to create a really cool book related idea where you're like, "Oh my gosh, there was a little free library in my neighborhood and I wanted to redo it and repaint it and give fresh books in there." So I'm going to just do a fun vlog documenting that process because it is fun for me and I love it. So, this is how to make sure well-rounded you're hitting all these pillars that are going To drive your business as a content creator. I truly believe this video found you for a reason.
And the fact that you're watching to this point really shows how dedicated you are to becoming a content creator. And I want you to know like you are not too late to start this journey. You are not too far behind. You are right where you need to be. Your path is set and ready for you to pursue. And you honestly, you deserve to live the life of your dreams and Pursue this with resilience and passion and fire to have the dreams of being a content creator come true. Like, you deserve that. You can do it.
You are capable. the fact that you're literally watching to this point. If you made it this far in your comment on this video, use an orange heart because that's going to tell me who made it to this part of the video. And y'all are the real ones. You're y'all are the ones where I'm like, "Okay, you got this. I believe in You." You know? So, I hope this video brought you so much value and excitement and showed you that yes, you can become a content creator. I hope you got a lot of value from the
workbook. book. If you didn't already download it, be sure to grab it. It is completely free. And at some point, if you need more guidance or you need more step-by-step in-depth tutorials on each of the things that we talked about and then some, of course, I have the BSP model, which is always open To you. and you will get 30 days of the Slack community where you can work with me and my team and get one-on-one feedback to improve and increase your the quality of your content, your bio, your strategy, and your brand pitches, everything
that you need as a content creator. So, I hope you consider BSP Model at some point in your creator journey. Thank you so much for watching this video and I will see you in the next one. Follow your joy. Bye.