Hey,
Every day, I try to figure out how to paint a picture that will help you understand YouTube better.
The number one factor for a video to work is the idea, this we know. And coming up with ideas is the hardest part for most creators. While I've been sharing our YouTube idea bank with you, I realized something important:
These are only stand-alone ideas, not an infinite source of inspiration. That's why I've been working on something different: a YouTube video format library.
Part of what I do daily is consume a lot of content and here are some of my favorites:
We created a full YouTube Idea Bank with all the previous outliers.
It all sounds great when I tell you to just come up with good video ideas to grow your channel. But new ideas take a lot of effort to come up with as explained in our previous newsletter about finding the gaps in the market.
So I already explained how you come up with new ideas, I will share some examples of finding the gaps in the market and nailing content pillars for consistent growth.
I want to give you a disclaimer or a heads-up that it takes time and effort to find and refine these content pillars.
It's so worth all the effort to figure out what video formats work for your goals. It will reduce the efforts to make your channel grow 10x, and that's not even exaggerated.
Think about your best-performing video.
What if you could replicate that success again and again?
That's what a format allows you to do. It becomes your content pillar, a repeatable framework that consistently delivers results.
Content pillars are the core themes or overarching topics that a channel chooses to consistently focus on and create content around.
Channel growth <- content pillar <- video ideas
That is the order of progression for any growing channel.
Content pillars work when you accept that posting the same topic or type of video repeatedly is okay. Many people we talk to don't want to post about something again because they already have.
If a certain email outreach script works, would you stop using it because you already sent someone an email with that? No.
Double down on what works.
Different content pillars can have different outcomes, the most obvious one is of course channel growth. A type of video that gets more views than others, but case studies for example is a video format or a content pillar that helps to convert viewers into customers. Some formats are to get more course sales, calls booked, brand awareness, AdSense revenue, lead generation, etc.
PhotographyExplained is a photography channel for amateurs, explained by an amateur. It grew to almost 20k subs in a very competitive niche in about 5 months.
This channel is part of our done-for-you Playstack Studio package and we've been monitoring closely.
The channel works well doing a few formats that I'll break down here - the best part is that it can continue to make videos in these formats.
Technical Myth-Busting
“The TRUTH About…” Series
Photographers Caught/Drama
Title Formula
Thumbnail Style
Content Angles
Videos that perform best combine technical authority with pattern-interrupt premises that make photography more accessible.
Worth noting: Tutorial-style content (“How to shoot in manual mode”) consistently underperforms compared to these myth-busting/revelation formats, suggesting the audience responds better to content that challenges their existing knowledge rather than basic education.
This formula could be further optimized by:
1. Focusing on technical debates/comparisons
2. Simplifying complex concepts
3. Using strong visual proof
4. Maintaining a contrarian but helpful perspective
As a photographer myself for the last 10 years, I love this channel.
Other parts of its success are his experience in delivering a message and the production quality of the videos and setup.
A video format is your repeatable framework, your proven recipe for creating content that works. Think of it like a fill-in-the-blank template for your videos.
Here's why formats matter:
The Format Formula:
Start by analyzing videos you love. Notice their patterns. Then test different formats until you find one that feels natural to you and resonates with your audience.
What's your best-performing video? Reply to this email, and I'll help you identify the format elements that made it work.
I break down the 5 essential roles that make a YouTube channel thrive:
By separating creative and technical roles, you reduce decision fatigue and let team members focus on their strengths. Even as a solo creator, understanding these distinct functions helps you organize your workflow more efficiently.