Try to make it snappy and avoid long gaps with silence, because a lot of people will click away plus this will enable people to stay for the whole thing. Especially if they see it thst it will take 49 min to hear your pointers. Starting with the most inportant message followed by how and why will retain more people.
@forlorncrusade4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip. I’m still figuring things out.
@HappyQuailsLC4 ай бұрын
@@forlorncrusade You'll do fine. : ) Just notice what you like best in videos and that will give you a good start : )
@Faraday1003 ай бұрын
I think most everyone's early videos are nothing like their later videos. It's harder to do good video than most people who haven't done one think. Take comments into account and analyze lots of videos that you like. I can't look at my early tv appearances. They are too horrible. It just takes practice and thought. You can do it.
@MarkSmith-wq8eq4 ай бұрын
Sorry but I am a low voltage tech for 22 years. I work on electricity from 110VAC to 24VDC. (Also POE networks that can be 55 to 76VDC) I work on Access, Fire, CCTV, Intercoms, Gates, Turnstiles, and Electronic Locks, and anything else my boss has me install. I watch videos all of the time because there is always something new to learn. for example I am trying to get my employer to pay for a cert for Microsoft SQL. I am not trying to be a troll but just trying to add some constructive criticism being in the same field. If I did the video I would have broken it up into three parts. 1. Hand Tools 2. Power Tools 3. Laptops and test equipment. I wouldn't explain what I like about them, just what they are used for. I would avoid commenting about broken needle noise pliers or how long I have owned it for. Try using notes to keep focused on what you are going to say. I would keep an outline behind the camera of what I am going to discuss so the conversation stays fluid. Then on later videos you can do tool reviews and talk about what you like about the tools, how long you owned them and so on.