full tilt
Take an intelligent approach to business
Working smart is critical to being a profitable content creator. But what exactly does “working smart” look like?
In her Creator Economy Expo presentation, Trish Witkowski, president and creator of FoldFactory, shares five things she does to refine her content operations into a successful and sustainable content business about paper-folding ideas, trends, and strategies for memorable marketing.
Whether you’re like Trish, who creates videos, or focus on another medium, doing these things can help you go from content creator to content entrepreneur.
1. Research beyond the boilerplate: Third-party analytics tools, also referred to as channel growth tools, can help improve your game and understand your audience better. They can provide more useful engagement analytics than YouTube Studio or other in-platform analytics.
You also learn what other channels are doing to see how your videos stack up with the competition and where you can improve. Trish uses vidIQ, but there are loads of tools available, like TubeBuddy, Unmetric, and Vidooly.
For non-YouTube creators, you also can perform an analysis of your competitors’ content to see what works, what’s missing, etc. Semrush offers detailed guidance on how to do it.
2. Take a class: It may seem unnecessary or even inconvenient, but Trish highly recommends taking a course (not just watching how-to videos) to improve your content business. By engaging in a class, you are almost certain to gain a new perspective on your production. Courses also provide great opportunities to meet and learn from other creators.
For example, Trish took a class with Video Labs where she learned the value of looking at the metric of average percentage viewed. As she learned, views don’t tell the full story. It’s important to understand how much of your videos the audience watches to see which content resonates with your audience. Understanding where her audience loses interest helped inform adjustments to Trish’s future videos.
3. Focus on the audience experience: As Trish puts it, “Viewers will forgive you for being human, but they will not forgive you for bad audio.” It’s a lesson for every kind of creator: No one pays any attention to your actual content if it’s inconvenient or unpleasantly formed.
For video creators like Trish, that means making sure the technical aspects of your videos meet your audience’s standards so they stay engaged. She recommends making the most of ring lights and avoiding using the sound from the built-in camera. Take the time to research and test products to figure out which are right for your content. For more tips, she recommends visiting SpeakingGigs.pro. If you’re still lost, you can always do what Trish did: Hire a professional for a couple of hours to help you get set up properly or even figure out what devices you need.
4. Master best practices (then pick and choose): Following best practices, such as posting on a schedule, using keywords, and engaging with your community, is a necessary part of a successful content business. However, keeping up with all of those practices can be time-consuming and tedious.
Trish recommends that you first determine your goals and a few areas that will measure if you’re meeting them. Then decide which best practices will help your business thrive in those areas and which can be ignored.
5. Don’t forget you’re a business: Creating content may be your passion, but it’s also your business. If you’re not efficient with your time and energy, you’ll burn out. Figure out where your hours are best spent and eliminate projects that aren’t profitable or important to your business.
Trish uses a schedule to ensure she spends her time creating quality content and not spinning her wheels. She blocks off 8 a.m. to noon Thursdays to create her weekly video. She never spends longer than that because the videos must post at noon. If you spend too much time on a task or never have time to get to another, you also can try changing the order you do things to see if that improves your productivity.
– Leo Bonacci
Get more operational tips from Trish and other advice to grow your content business with the Creator Economy Expo Digital Pass.
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5 things to know
Money
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Challenge this: TikTok takes the ad game to the competitive arena. Its new Creative Challenge for creators with at least 50K followers lets them submit video ads to brand challenges. Their reward is based on video performance. (Tech Crunch)
Tilt Take: Gamifying the ad game is an interesting twist that will favor brands over creators.
Audiences
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Sewing up: Threads, Meta’s Twitter alternative, launched a day before it was scheduled. They say it works like Twitter but with more focus on creators and influencers popular on Instagram. (CBS News)
Tilt Take: We love a surprise release – and so do audiences. Think about how to surprise your audience with exclusive previews, early releases, etc.
Tech and Tools
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Link on: YouTube may add links to keywords in the comments. It says it’s testing the feature to see if it drives improved discovery and connects users to related content. (Social Media Today)
Tilt Take: Does YouTube really care about helping users, or is it more interested in minimizing the need for viewers to leave the platform to search for related content? -
Unintended consequence: Twitter implemented a login rule to stop data scraping. What followed the next day was an 18% drop in its visibility in Google search results because the rule blocked Google’s search crawlers. Twitter removed the rule. (Search Engine Journal)
Tilt Take: Play out the best- and worst-case scenarios that could arise from changes in your content business. Then analyze whether the change is worth it.
And Finally
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AI-powered: When ad agency Ogilvy uses virtual or AI-generated influencers, it uses #poweredbyAI and a watermark. It and others are calling for AI transparency, while some say it’s not necessary. (Insider)
Tilt Take: Will #poweredbyAI be as ineffective as #ad? #WeWonder.
5 things from the tilt
- The magic “one word” survey question for your newsletter.
- Learn what some creators would do if they started their business today. You get access until the end of 2023 starting at less than $17 a session.
- Joe shares three tips for the success of his podcast and gives some insight on how to integrate podcasting into your content entrepreneur business. (Content Inc. podcast)
- Joe and Robert discuss whether Twitter competitor Threads has enough juice. (This Old Marketing podcast)
- ICYMI: Gig or Creator? Exploration of the Globe’s Biggest (and Newest) Economies in 2023
the tilt team
Your team for this issue: Joe Pulizzi, Ann Gynn, Laura Kozak, Marc Maxhimer, and Dave Anthony with an assist from Leo Bonacci.
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