Ariel Hyatt does it again – how to get massive traffic on YouTube
I’ve said before how much I love Ariel Hyatt and what she does, both as a PR person and as a musician’s resource.
Check out her site and products here – Ariel Cyber PR
She’s just posted a fantastic article (as she does on a weekly basis) about how to maximise your traffic on YouTube. It’s actually written by Cassie Petrey of Crowdsurf.net, a company that specialises in Social Media campaigns for artists.
Read it here and digest. It covers all the essential basics of how to set up a channel and build awareness for your band through the wonders of YouTube.
We’ve been making all the people we work with use Youtube for a long while, particularly making tour diary videos and rehearsal back stage videos. The fans love it and you should be doing it.
A few other tips about making videos and looking for traffic on YouTube (and the other video sites too!):
- don’t forget that looking to drive traffic is an essential part of your job as a self marketing musician and that ultimately you want to get people to your site or MySpace page and to join your email list but the video should also always be an end destination in itself and should therefore be as good quality as you can make it. That doesn’t mean it has to be polished and brilliantly edited – it just needs to be good quality content and entertaining or inspiring or revealing;
- Google and the other search engines can’t see videos (not yet at least!), so you need to make sure that your title and description are telling them what it is;
- if you have a 10 minute video, break it down into parts 1 and 2 of 5 minutes each. People have very short attention spans and this will help to keep them watching and hopefully make them move on to part 2;
- in your description, ask people to comment. This helps the search engines rate your video as well as doing so for YouTube;
- Top Tip, and a bit sneaky! – Target related videos: search on YouTube for the videos with the most views in a day and check from the comments and their dates that they are still getting views now. When you’ve established that they’re being watched a lot right now, try to match your title, tags and description to those that are in that high rotation. Obviously, your video must make sense with those tags. Then, YouTube will place your video in the ‘Related Videos’ column to the right and you will get a load of traffic from people watching those high rotation videos.
- A great way to do the above trick is to find a massive new single that is getting huge views and film something a.s.a.p that makes sense in relation to it. So, just a few minutes of your band doing a rushed cover version in rehearsal or something like that. Then the keywords will match up.
- Don’t just use YouTube – it should be your focus because it is for everyone else, but also getting a lot of traffic are Google, DailyMotion and Viddler. If you really get into that, you’ll be needing to use Tubemogul to upload to multiple sites at once.
So, that’s a few extra little insights into Ariel’s chosen topic for the week. Go and check her post out – Read it here





















May 5th, 2009 at 2:56 pm
great stuff – agree with all of this and have learnt some tips too – we promote many of the videos that are commissioned through us and have got c3 million views for mainly very small artists. Another site we use is Vimeo, it’s a lovely player if you want to embed your video elsewhere.
Echo your thumbs up for Tubemogul, it’s such a time saver and the free part of their service meets many needs.
Requesting a video response – which makes a link back to your channel if the recipient accepts it is also a good way to build traffic. I used to turn down all video response requests, not understanding the point, but they encourage users to navigate around like content, so it’s valuable network of collaboration to build.
all best
Caroline @radarmusicvideo
January 9th, 2010 at 10:30 pm
I love this blog. I have wanted to start writing a blog like this but am not technically oriented at all. Is Wordpress hard to use (meaning you have to know programming)? I would love to share some of my knowledge I learned over the years in HR about how to write a resume the right way.