The Formula To Break 100 Million Views On Shorts (ft/ Jenny Hoyos)
05 May 2024 (8 months ago)
- Jenny Hoyos is a short-form video creator who consistently achieves millions of views on her videos.
- She has not achieved this success through prior fame or extraordinary content, but rather by understanding the formula for creating viral short-form videos.
- Jenny Hoyos is an 18-year-old YouTuber who creates videos centered around being a "cheapskate," earning her the nickname "Mr. Least."
- She started creating content two years ago and has since seen a significant improvement in the quality and virality of her videos.
- Jenny Hoyos shares her specific strategies and tactics for creating viral short-form videos on TikTok and YouTube.
- Despite her young age and living at home with her parents, she has managed to achieve remarkable success in a short span of time.
How to build charisma (2m14s)
- To create engaging content, it's crucial to cultivate a high-energy state of mind, as charisma and energy can be transmitted through content, impacting the viewer's emotional state.
- Consistent practice, even if it involves recording content that won't be published, can help build charisma and personality.
- Deliberate practice, similar to building muscles or learning a skill, can enhance charisma and on-camera presence.
- Identifying valuable but unpopular skills, such as charisma development, can lead to significant improvement and differentiation from others.
- Jenny Hoyos, at the age of 18, actively seeks out and develops skills, which is commendable.
The 4 criteria of a great idea (jumpcut) (6m35s)
- Novelty: presenting something new and original.
- Uncertainty: creating a sense of unpredictability and curiosity about the outcome.
- Knowledge gaps: sharing information that the viewer doesn't know, creating a sense of intrigue.
- Complexity: introducing a level of complexity that requires the viewer to pay attention and engage with the content.
- "What does $1 get you at Starbucks?" (23 million views):
- Title poses an unresolved question, piquing viewer curiosity.
- "Who has the best dollar menu?" (3.1 million views):
- Unresolved question creates anticipation about the outcome.
- Visually engaging thumbnail hints at the content.
Make it personal (8m48s)
- Weaving personal stories into videos increases relatability and returning viewership.
- A free business idea database with over 50 ideas from the show is now available.
- Low-stakes videos can be more engaging than high-stakes ones.
- To improve a video idea, consider adding novelty, complexity, knowledge gaps, or uncertainty.
- To create a successful YouTube Short with the potential to reach over 100 million views, focus on creating a simple and easy-to-understand concept.
- Add layers of complexity, novelty, and juxtaposition to make the idea more interesting, but avoid confusing the viewer.
- Incorporate a personal story to add emotional depth and stakes to the video.
- Present the concept in a way that is easy to digest and drip-feed context to the viewer.
- Draw inspiration from successful creators like MrBeast, whose videos often feature simple and universal concepts that can be easily understood by a wide audience.
Mastering the hook (15m20s)
- Use power words at the beginning of the video to instantly hook viewers.
- Make the hook progress the video by telling viewers what the video is about or what action will be taken.
- Foreshadow the end of the video in the hook to set up the conflict and resolution.
- The two most important metrics for idea and hook in short-form videos are viewer swipe away percentage and retention.
- A good viewer swipe away percentage is 80%, excellent is 85%+.
- A good retention rate is 90%, excellent is 95%+.
- Keep the first frame simple with high brightness and saturation.
- Enhance elements to make them stand out, such as adding artificial fire or VFX effects.
- Avoid busy environments and use clean, perfect images.
- Foreshadowing is giving viewers the expectation of the video's end.
- Implied foreshadowing is hinting at the video's conclusion without explicitly stating it.
- Strong foreshadowing and hooks involve a mechanism that shows progression and keeps viewers engaged.
Storytelling in one word is “change” (23m12s)
- Storytelling is about progression and character development.
- The best storytelling involves a change in the character from the beginning to the end of the video.
- Subtle changes can make viewers rewatch the video to see how the change occurs.
- Rewatchability is one of the key factors in getting 100 million views on Shorts.
- Easter eggs, tutorial videos, and twists in the video can all increase rewatchability.
- Tutorial videos are rewatchable because people often need to watch them multiple times to learn all the steps.
- Twists in the video make viewers want to rewatch the video with the new knowledge they have after the twist.
The But & Therefore Rule (25m47s)
- But storytelling adds conflict throughout the video, making it more intriguing.
- Example: Instead of saying "I went on a walk and it started raining," say "I was walking but then it started raining, so I had to find an umbrella."
- Replace "and" with "but" to create conflict and make the story more interesting.
- Stakes are what's on the line and why it matters that the character does what they do.
- Even though Shorts are short, it's important to include stakes to make the story more compelling.
Building the stakes (27m56s)
- Use real stakes that are happening in your real life.
- Increase the stakes over time to keep viewers engaged.
- Show clips or visuals that demonstrate the stakes.
- Breaking Bad:
- The main character, Walter White, is diagnosed with cancer and needs to make money for his family.
- He starts selling drugs, but doesn't know anything about it, so he partners with a former student who is a drug user.
- The stakes get bigger as the story progresses, with the DEA getting involved and Walter's brother-in-law being the DEA agent.
- Eventually, Walter is running a drug empire and the stakes are life or death.
- Keep endings short while providing a payoff to ensure viewer satisfaction.
- Use the "Peak Theory" to create intense emotions at the end of the video, leaving a positive lasting impression.
- End with strong wholesomeness or the funniest moment in the video.
- Incorporate twists for great rewatchability.
Steal like an artist (32m49s)
- "Steal like an artist" means taking inspiration rather than recreating video ideas.
- Steal from topics or movie techniques, not exact ideas.
- Add a unique twist to the base idea.
- Example: Jenny Hoyos takes inspiration from MrBeast's philanthropic acts and adds her own twist by doing similar things on a budget.
- Use data analysis tools to identify outliers and patterns in successful videos.
- Created a tool to manually label videos based on content, actions, and mentions.
- Found that having family in wholesome videos doubled subscriber conversions but decreased views by 10x.
- Malicious content resulted in regular conversions but 10x more views, leading to 5x more subscribers.
- Building tools to maximize views, retention, viewer satisfaction, etc.
- Analyzes channels and Shorts with exceptional view counts (e.g., 10 million views) to identify outlier concepts.
- Compares outlier concepts to the creator's baseline performance to determine what makes them unique and successful.
Study the channel for outliers (37m21s)
- Jenny Hoyos manually studies trending shorts every morning, afternoon, and night.
- She creates a swipe file of interesting content for inspiration.
- Jenny used to create content for a younger self as her avatar.
- To reach 100 million subscribers, she now creates content for multiple avatars and tries to cater to every audience.
- Her guiding principle is to make content that is intriguing for kids but mature enough for adults to also watch.
- She includes her mom in her videos to appeal to a wider audience.
Where is the puck going? (40m3s)
- Short-form video content is gaining immense popularity, with some videos reaching hundreds of millions of views across platforms.
- Many creators struggle to transition from successful short-form content to long-form content due to the algorithm-driven nature of short-form platforms, which may hinder building loyalty and trust.
- The future of video content may favor extremes, with very short or very long-form content thriving, while mid-length content may face challenges.
- Social media platforms like YouTube have the potential to overshadow traditional entertainment industries like Hollywood.
- Jenny Hoyos, an 18-year-old YouTuber, creates low-budget, fun content to inspire people to value money and live fulfilling lives without excessive spending.
- Despite aspirations of becoming a prominent YouTuber like MrBeast, Hoyos prioritizes staying true to her message of resourcefulness and self-reliance, even if it means potentially sacrificing subscriber count.
- Hoyos shares her formula for breaking 100 million views on YouTube Shorts, emphasizing the importance of a strong premise and a clear message in videos.
- Hoyos offers one-hour consultation calls to help creators review their videos and strategies for social media growth. Interested individuals can contact her at team@jos.com.