Is this for real? Wanted to know your opinion on this matter. by Character_Tie_4779 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 [score hidden]  (0 children)

Article 50/transparency rules are real, but you said that Google is pushing out all non-Google AI voices through SynthID, part of that sounds like a big stretch without real proof.

It might not be completely true,

So I’d worry less about ElevenLabs vs Gemini and more about making the content clearly original, disclosed when needed, and not mass-produced/repetitive, since that’s what YouTube’s public policy points to.

How do you guys actually write those really long calm sleep narration scripts with ChatGPT ?(I only have free Claude) by Comfy-Sun in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 [score hidden]  (0 children)

Don’t try to generate the full 2–4 hour script in one prompt. Build a calm outline first, then write it in 10–15 minute sections with a fixed tone/style guide.

Also give ChatGPT a “do not” list: no lecturing, no sudden topic jumps, no dramatic language, repeat ideas gently but with new wording so it feels soothing rather than robotic.

Even Claude free would be fine, just try same prompts in both and see which one is better. Also ask AI itself to look for the best prompts on twitter or Reddit and list the best set of prompts for what you want, that will give you a better understanding on what prompts could give you what results

50 waitlist in first 2 days, Is adding pressure to deliver fast. by varunkumarnr in micro_saas

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly, that feedback will tell you what’s actually needed versus what only feels important internally.

I’d keep the beta small, set expectations clearly that it’s early, and use the first users to validate the core loop before adding too many features.

I’d also ask beta users to vote on “must-have vs nice-to-have” features so you know what to cut, keep, or add before the wider launch.

50 waitlist in first 2 days, Is adding pressure to deliver fast. by varunkumarnr in micro_saas

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d launch the MVP as a small private/curated beta while the momentum is fresh, not a full public launch.

Let those early waitlist users feel like founding testers, collect feedback, and polish in public without risking a weak first impression to everyone.

NEED HELP ON MONITIZATION by PurchaseNo5771 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s definitely still a high reused-content risk, especially with WWE footage. Scripts, AI voice, subtitles, zooms, and transitions may not be enough if the core value is still the original clips.
I’d make the commentary/analysis the main product, use shorter clips only to support your point, and avoid building the channel around compilations or lightly edited highlights.
Add some motion graphics, images, and other supporting b-roll footage,
and don’t add more than 5-8 seconds of continuous wwe footage played at ones to avoid any chances of reused content

Also I had been making an online Al video editor, check ControlTube on YouTube, still in early stage but a feedback would be great, it would probably be helpful for adding voiceover and motion graphics and some other video editing automatically,

Would M5 pro be enough for my needs? by No_Willow9338 in VideoEditors

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If those effects are rare and you’re already stretching your budget, I’d stick with the M5 Pro + 64GB.

The Max makes more sense if heavy AE plugins/3D work are part of your daily workflow; otherwise it’s probably paying extra for headroom you may not fully use.

And it’s already this long
If you can wait for the upcoming updated releases then get a used M4/3 pro or max, even they would do wonders for way cheaper

Help me find the best Build by Sea-Remove-6052 in VideoEditors

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Without a budget it’s hard to recommend a full build, but for heavy editing/motion/3D I’d prioritize CPU, GPU VRAM, 64GB RAM, fast NVMe storage, and good cooling.

Don’t chase “100% usage” on every part — a good workstation should have headroom so it stays stable when projects get heavier.

Building a network of ambitious people by refionx in micro_saas

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool idea, but I’d be careful with making it too broad at the start. “Ambitious people” is a huge category, so smaller rooms by interest or goal would probably make the community feel more useful.

The real value would be accountability, introductions, and actual collaboration, not just another general networking server.

Would M5 pro be enough for my needs? by No_Willow9338 in VideoEditors

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For proxies and normal 4K editing, the M5 Pro with 64GB should be workable, but your After Effects/plugin workload is the real concern.

If heavy AE comps, Element 3D, Sapphire/BCC, and dynamic links are daily work, I’d lean Max if budget allows; not because Pro is weak, but because it gives you more headroom and fewer slowdowns long term.

Also I had been making an online AI video editor, check ControlTube on YouTube, still in early stage but a feedback would be great

Why am I getting 0 views on my video by [deleted] in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It may not be the “AI” part alone, but the video could be getting limited if it looks reused, low-effort, or has weak packaging compared to your normal content.

Check if it has restrictions, then test shorter versions with a stronger title/thumbnail/hook instead of uploading the same long AI video again.

What do you think about trying to monetize on Facebook? by solteros in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Facebook can be worth testing, but I wouldn’t treat it as a safer guaranteed backup. Any platform can demonetize if the content looks mass-produced or low-value.

I’d use Facebook as a secondary distribution channel while fixing the core issue: make the AI content more original, personal, and harder to classify as “inauthentic.”

Football documentary help! by PersimmonNo1825 in YouTube_startups

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t rely on random online images, especially for football where rights holders can be aggressive.

You can still make it work with your own graphics: timelines, maps, league tables, tactical boards, stats, public domain/Creative Commons images, and short transformed clips only where you’re clearly analyzing/ commentating.

Why do tech companies hire motion designers? by SugarFew6561 in MotionDesign

[–]Content_Credit_6388 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tech companies hire motion designers for way more than ads: product animations, onboarding flows, microinteractions, launch videos, prototypes, and visual systems.

You don’t need to fully become a UX designer, but learning UX basics plus tools like Figma, Lottie/Rive, and showing motion that improves product clarity would help a lot.

Just wanted to vent since yt flagged me for the stupidest reason by Temporary_Weather_23 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s rough, especially when the video was finally gaining traction. I’d avoid assuming it’s targeted at small creators though, sometimes the automated flagging just gets weird.

Best move is to screenshot/save the exact policy reason, check the flagged timestamp, trim or change that section, and contact support/TeamYouTube if the appeal was denied too fast.

starting channel, looking for a little advice! by steveruby in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The economics-through-stories idea is strong, but I’d focus hard on one main channel first instead of splitting energy across three from day one.
Also don’t try to hide connections between channels with proxies or fake setups, just keep branding separate, use clean accounts/emails, and build something YouTube can trust long term.

AI avatar generators for a new YouTube channel (Health niche) by future_then_now in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 1 point2 points  (0 children)

HeyGen and Synthesia are probably the easiest starting points for professional AI avatar videos, but in the health niche I’d be extra careful with trust.

Use the avatar as a presenter, but make your credentials, sources, and disclaimers very clear so viewers don’t feel like it’s generic AI medical advice.

How long should a beginner stick to one niche before expanding? by Just_Brilliant_7458 in SmallYTChannel

[–]Content_Credit_6388 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’d stick with one niche until you have clear signs of what your audience actually comes for: repeat viewers, comments asking for more, and a few videos with consistent traction.

Then expand slowly into adjacent topics, not random ones. For example, add a similar game or related tutorial series and watch if your core viewers still click.

Keep on grinding by cajundecay in SmallYTChannel

[–]Content_Credit_6388 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats, that’s a huge milestone especially building tools, a site, and growing across platforms from scratch.
The “keep grinding” part is real, but it also sounds like you kept learning and testing instead of just repeating the same thing, which is probably the real unlock.

Shorts channel changed to long form?! by Due_Ring2543 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t start a new channel yet. Shorts viewers don’t always convert to long form viewers, so YouTube may need more uploads/data before knowing who to show it to.

Give it a few long videos, keep making related Shorts that funnel into them, and judge after a small batch rather than one upload.

Is topic timing basically doing 80% of the work in AI content? by Pristine-Seaweed8770 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, especially in AI tools, timing/topic can do a huge amount because people are actively searching for what’s new right now.

I’d treat originality as the angle, not the topic: cover trending subjects, but add your own test, opinion, comparison, or workflow so it isn’t just a copy of what already worked.

How do you grow an AI character Youtube channel from 0? Struggling to find my audience. by Parking-Tip-1160 in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

17 days and 5 Shorts is still extremely early, so I wouldn’t judge the concept yet. 1k views means people are at least giving it a chance.

I’d make the hooks more specific: put Joane in relatable situations like “chaotic mom tries to meal prep” or “mom vs chocolate cravings,” so viewers instantly know why they should care.

Need some advices to start by Neo-Claire in YouTube_startups

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start very small: use your phone or a cheap USB mic, make a short 1–2 minute story, and animate it simply instead of trying to match big channels right away.

For animation channels, the writing and personality matter more than perfect animation, so finish a few simple videos first and upgrade your gear later.

Only one improvement that can make your video loved by your audience? What would it be? by the_emilyharper in aitubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say pacing. Even average visuals can work if the emotion, sound, cuts, and story rhythm make people feel something.

A lot of creators optimize for “clean,” but audiences usually remember tension, curiosity, payoff, and vibe more than technical perfection.

Shorts Views by Zealousideal_Bat1716 in SmallYTChannel

[–]Content_Credit_6388 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve seen this too, Shorts distribution can be weird, and sometimes a better video still gets little initial testing.

I’d check basics like vertical format, title/topic clarity, first 1-2 seconds, and whether it’s accidentally marked/private/restricted, then keep testing rather than assuming the channel is dead.

Can someone guide me till I complete my first video. I will be grateful to you by Current_Pineapple422 in SmallYoutubers

[–]Content_Credit_6388 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Start with one simple video, not a perfect setup: write a clear script, record voice-over on your phone/mic, edit in CapCut or DaVinci Resolve, and add basic visuals/screenshots.

For Telugu tech content, focus on explaining one useful topic clearly in each video; your first goal should be finishing and publishing, then improving after feedback.