Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Fix a failing YouTube channel

 If you feel like your content is “failing,” you’re not alone—almost every creator hits this wall. The key is to treat it less like failure and more like data telling you what’s not working yet. Here’s a clear, practical way to diagnose and turn things around. 



🔎 1. Identify what kind of failure it is


Different problems need different fixes: 

  • Low views → Discovery problem (SEO, thumbnails, hooks)


  • Views but low engagement → Content quality or mismatch


  • Good engagement but no growth → Distribution problem


  • Burnout / inconsistency → Process and expectations issue


👉 Don’t guess—look at your analytics and pinpoint the exact issue. 



🎯 2. Fix your positioning (this is the #1 issue)


Most struggling creators are too broad or unclear. 

Instead of: 


“I make content about life, teaching, and random thoughts”


Try: 


“I help English students improve writing using simple, real examples”


Ask yourself: 

  • Who exactly is this for?


  • What problem do I solve?


  • Why should someone choose me over others?


👉 Clarity grows faster than quality early on. 



🧠 3. Improve your hook (first 3–10 seconds)


You can have great content—but if no one stays, it dies. 

Bad hook: 


“Hey guys, today I’m going to talk about…”


Better hooks: 

  • “Most students make this writing mistake—and don’t know it.”


  • “If your essays feel boring, this is why.”


  • “I tested 3 ways to improve writing—only one worked.”


👉 The job of the hook is to earn attention, not introduce yourself



🔄 4. Use feedback loops, not guesswork


After each post, ask: 

  • Where do people drop off?


  • Which posts perform better? Why?


  • What comments/questions keep repeating?


Then: 

  • Double down on what works


  • Cut what doesn’t


👉 Growth = iteration, not inspiration 



📅 5. Fix consistency (without burning out)


You don’t need daily content—you need predictable output

Example: 

  • 2 posts/week, same days


  • Batch create when possible


👉 Consistency builds trust with both your audience and the algorithm 



🚀 6. Stop trying to be “original”—be useful


Early-stage creators often overthink originality. 

Instead: 

  • Teach something clearly


  • Explain something better


  • Add your perspective to proven formats


👉 Execution > originality (especially at the start) 



📣 7. Lean into distribution (this is underrated)


Posting isn’t enough. 

  • Share content in relevant communities


  • Repurpose across platforms


  • Repost your best content (with tweaks)


👉 Most creators under-share and over-create 



🧱 8. Lower expectations—but raise standards


Hard truth: 

  • Growth usually takes longer than you think


  • Most creators quit right before progress


Better mindset: 

  • Focus on skill-building over virality


  • Treat the first 50–100 posts as practice




🧭 9. If nothing works, pivot deliberately


Not random changes—strategic ones: 

Try adjusting: 

  • Topic niche


  • Format (short vs long, talking vs editing)


  • Platform (TikTok vs YouTube vs blog)


  • Audience target


👉 Keep 1–2 variables constant so you can measure results 



⚠️ 10. Watch for hidden issues


Sometimes the problem isn’t content—it’s: 

  • Poor audio/video quality


  • Weak thumbnails or titles


  • No clear value per post


  • Posting without audience intent




✅ Simple action plan (start here)


  1. Pick 1 clear audience + problem


  1. Create 10 pieces of content focused on that


  1. Improve hooks on every post


  1. Study analytics after each upload


  1. Double down on your top 20%




If you want, tell me: 

  • what platform you’re on


  • what kind of content you make


…and I’ll give you a targeted growth strategy instead of general advice.