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YouTube Saturation

Shawn

Hiking with Shawn
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Is YouTube oversaturated as a video platform?

Are there just too many creators to really make an effort of promoting your videos on there?

If that is the case - where would one go as an alternative?
 
I'm sure you know a lot more about the content creator side of YouTube than I do, but I don't see a lot of alternatives. YouTube is the only social media that I partake in aside from some specialized online forums such as this.

One thing I like about YouTube is that you can watch the videos without signing in or even signing up for an account.
 
I'm sure you know a lot more about the content creator side of YouTube than I do, but I don't see a lot of alternatives. YouTube is the only social media that I partake in aside from some specialized online forums such as this.

One thing I like about YouTube is that you can watch the videos without signing in or even signing up for an account.
Yeah, YouTube does make it easy to consume the content provided.

Most of the other social media platforms require you to login to see most of its content.
 
Yeah, YouTube does make it easy to consume the content provided.

Most of the other social media platforms require you to login to see most of its content.
That's one thing that turns me off to FB. I fully understand that I would need to register in order to post content or comment, but just to view a video that someone else posted?

My church posts the Sunday morning service on FB. I go to church on Saturday night and it's not posted. I occasionally want to watch the Sunday morning service on FB and usually I can without an account, especially if I go through the links on the church website, but they don't make it easy. There are always nag screens and you are limited on viewing comments others have posted or searching for something.

The more FB tries to force me to sign up, the more I dig in my heels. I know I'm not the only one either. I don't know much about all the other social media providers. They're irrelevant to me. YT is by far the biggest source of videos I watch, followed distantly by FB if I can view without an account. I've watched a few things that are hosted on Vimeo when that's embedded or linked from a website. It's not too bad, but limited content there.
 
For me as a content creator, I do better on Facebook than anywhere else.

My HWS Facebook page just hit 34,000 followers. It gets 1.5 to 3 million views each month.

I have a hiking group on there that has over 50,000 members.

Facebook is my best platform but there is a lot wrong with it.

I like forums because we get people who don't need social all the time and actually want to be a part of a community where you recognize your fellow members. Social is too "viral" to take notice of people for every long.
 
You bring up a couple good points in the last paragraph.

A forum like this is more like going to the local coffee shop and chatting with local people who have a lot of the same interests and outlook on things, but you also get a bit of fresh input from those with different experiences and ideas. By local I don't necessarily mean geographically local, but more being a community, to use your word, with common overlapping interests. People may come and go from time to time, but if you're around long enough you'll get to know different people from their posts.

The big problem I see with "big" social media is the algorithm feeds you similar content to what you have already viewed. That can be a double-edged sword. People are usually wanting to see more of what they like or are interested in, but it can also make for a stale experience without enough new things to broaden horizons.

For hot button topics like politics, social issues, or religion it is especially bad because it leads to echo chamber thinking. I'd like to think I'm immune, but I don't think anybody is. I think social media algorithms are a big driver of the polarization we see in this country. We' might all be better if we could go back to a simpler time where people socialized in person at places like coffee shops, churches, sporting events, clubs, and fraternal organizations. People wouldn't always agree on politics or share exactly the same interests, but mapping it out as Venn diagrams, there was a lot more overlap in the center. Although I don't participate in social media except for YouTube, I recognize it is just as bad as other platforms for driving division and polarization. User beware I guess.
 
The big problem I see with "big" social media is the algorithm feeds you similar content to what you have already viewed. That can be a double-edged sword. People are usually wanting to see more of what they like or are interested in, but it can also make for a stale experience without enough new things to broaden horizons.
It's the same with the ads that get served online.

You'll buy a backpack from REI for example and then start seeing backpack ads from REI. You already bought the backpack, why would they serve an ad for the same thing? LOL
 
Yes, I agree with you about the ads on YouTube. I ordered new CV axles for my old Explorer from Detroit Axle several months ago. I'm not going to ever be ordering any more, yet I still get their ads. They're not as tiresome as some ads like life insurance or Medicare supplement insurance, but still not something I want to see. I try not to skip ads for channels I want to support. I just turn off the sound during the ad. The only downside to that is that if the ad algorithm picks up on you watching something without skipping it seems to feed you the same ad repeatedly and longer ads as well. Sometimes I let one ad play on the YT app on TV, while I watch another video on my phone.
 
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