Develop A YouTube Programming Strategy And Schedule Content For A Year

Suc­cess­ful YouTube chan­nels include these three types of video con­tent.

Greg Jarboe By Greg Jarboe from SEO-PR. Join the discussion » 0 comments

The days when YouTube was exclu­sive­ly a place for one-hit viral videos are gone. So, senior mar­keters who are inter­est­ed in build­ing suc­cess­ful chan­nels on YouTube have to con­sid­er their channel’s long-term plan for grow­ing an audi­ence. And that means devel­op­ing a viable pro­gram­ming strat­e­gy.


Anoth­er one of the sev­en ways to improve your video mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy is to devel­op a YouTube pro­gram­ming strat­e­gy and then sched­ule your con­tent for the year.

Pro­gram­ming” means cre­at­ing a cohe­sive view­ing expe­ri­ence across videos on your brand’s YouTube chan­nel, where each video fits into the larg­er chan­nel vision. It encap­su­lates both pre-pro­duc­tion and pro­duc­tion activ­i­ties; what type of con­tent to pro­duce and how to pub­lish and share it.

For exam­ple, Bran­don Tar­tikoff took over pro­gram­ming duties at NBC back in 1981. He is cred­it­ed with turn­ing around NBC’s low prime time rat­ings in that era with such hit series as “ALF”, “The A‑Team”, “Cheers”, “The Cos­by Show”, “Fam­i­ly Ties”, “The Gold­en Girls”, “Hill Street Blues”, “Knight Rid­er”, “L.A. Law”, “Law & Order”, “Mat­lock”, “Mia­mi Vice”, “Night Court”, “Punky Brew­ster”, “Rem­ing­ton Steele”, “Saved by the Bell”, “Sein­feld”, “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine”, “St. Else­where”, and “Wings”.

You also need to take over the pro­gram­ming duties for your YouTube chan­nel in this era. How­ev­er, instead of cre­at­ing TV sit­coms and dra­mas, your pro­gram­ming strat­e­gy should be artic­u­lat­ed around three dif­fer­ent types of online video con­tent.

Video Type 1: Hygiene Content

Although this sounds like a col­lec­tion of social hygiene films from the late 1940s and 1950s, it’s kin­da, sor­ta dif­fer­ent. Let’s see if I can explain.

You know who you want to reach. But to draw view­ers to your chan­nel, you need to under­stand what they’re search­ing for when they come to YouTube. After you find their most fre­quent search­es, then you can fig­ure out which queries your brand can cred­i­bly answer.

When you start mak­ing videos that quick­ly and clear­ly answer these queries, YouTube calls this “hygiene con­tent.” These could include tuto­ri­als that answer the most pop­u­lar search queries in your con­tent area.

For exam­ple, the YouTube Help Chan­nel has cre­at­ed videos which answer queries like: “What hap­pens when you update with Google+ on YouTube?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKBGsu0TxnY

See what I mean about this kin­da, sor­ta being dif­fer­ent from one of those social hygiene films from the late 1940s and 1950s?

Video Type 2: Hub Content

Hub con­tent is reg­u­lar, sched­uled con­tent that pro­vides a rea­son to sub­scribe to a chan­nel and return on a reg­u­lar basis. Episod­ic and for­mat­ted series work best as hub con­tent.

For exam­ple, after Orabrush cre­at­ed its most pop­u­lar video, “Bad Breath Test — How to Tell When Your Breath Stinks,” which has more than 19.4 mil­lion views, the com­pa­ny launched a series enti­tled, “Diary of a Dirty Tongue.” The series fea­tures Mor­gan, the Orabrush tongue, mak­ing a week­ly vlog about what tongues like to talk about.

Why?

Even though the com­pa­ny had cre­at­ed a one-hit viral video, it want­ed to pro­vide a rea­son to sub­scribe to their chan­nel and return on a reg­u­lar basis. And today, the Orabrush chan­nel has more than 190,000 sub­scribers. And “Where’s Mor­gan” now?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMPq2Rsmvlo

I don’t know. It’s a mys­tery.

Video Type 3: Hero Content

Hero con­tent refers to the big, tent-pole events that are designed to pro­vide a mas­sive step-change to your audi­ence growth. Hero con­tent could be a live-streamed event, a viral video, a Google+ Hang­out with top tal­ent, a cross-pro­mo­tion with a YouTube influ­encer, or even a made-for-YouTube ad. It may revolve around a large cul­tur­al event like Hal­loween or the Super Bowl, or it may be a major event that you insti­gate.

For exam­ple, the Dis­cov­ery Chan­nel cel­e­brates Shark Week every year in July or August. Shark Week was orig­i­nal­ly devel­oped to raise aware­ness and respect for sharks. Since then it has evolved into more fic­ti­tious pro­gram­ming, called “docu­fic­tion.”

For exam­ple, the faux news clip enti­tled, “Snuffy the Seal,” has been called the “fun­ni­est com­mer­cial of 2013.”

This year for Shark Week, we dis­cov­ered that “Snuffy Lives!

Create Your YouTube Programming Schedule

After you’ve orga­nized your con­tent into one of three cat­e­gories – hygiene, hub, or hero – then you’re ready to cre­ate a pro­gram­ming sched­ule. Although YouTube isn’t TV, some of the prin­ci­ples that dri­ve tele­vi­sion view­er­ship apply to the web. Reg­u­lar release sched­ules and time­ly pub­lish­ing are both impor­tant for online video.

  • Release videos on a set day of the week, if pos­si­ble; audi­ences like struc­ture.
  • If your chan­nel hosts mul­ti­ple shows, cre­ate a pro­gram­ming sched­ule.
  • Com­mu­ni­cate your sched­ule to your audi­ence so they know when new videos are released. Inform them in the video, on your chan­nel, and in video descrip­tions.

Next week, we’ll look at how to opti­mize your con­tent and chan­nel to ensure that you reach your audi­ence. That’s anoth­er way to improve your video mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy.


Does your video mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy include hygiene, hub, or hero con­tent as part of a YouTube pro­gram­ming sched­ule? Has it grown your audi­ence? Tell us in the com­ments!

Greg Jarboe

Written by Greg Jarboe

President, SEO-PR

Greg Jarboe is President and co-founder of SEO-PR, an award-winning content marketing agency that was founded in 2003. He’s the author of YouTube and Video Marketing and also a contributor to The Art of SEO, Strategic Digital Marketing, Complete B2B Online Marketing, and Enchantment. He’s profiled in the book Online Marketing Heroes, a frequent speaker at industry conferences, and writes for Tubular Insights and The SEM Post. He’s an executive education instructor at the Rutgers Business School and the Video and Content Marketing faculty chair at Simplilearn.

Inked is published by Linkdex, the SEO platform of choice for professional marketers.

Discover why brands and agencies choose Linkdex

  • Get started fast with easy onboarding & training
  • Import and connect data from other platforms
  • Scale with your business, websites and markets
  • Up-skill teams with training & accreditation
  • Build workflows with tasks, reporting and alerts

Get a free induction and experience of Linkdex.

Just fill out this form, and one of our team members will get in touch to arrange your own, personalized demo.