He Made $500,000 from Faceless YouTube Channels in 90 Days

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this video cost me I think $250 to produce and it ended up producing 20,000 um Us in the last year it's close to um seven figures in Q4 alone I did 400,000 nearly a half a million in AdSense Revenue the question is how how does Noah Morris earn up to $200,000 per month on YouTube working just one day a week the answer May trigger you faceless channels welcome to the world of YouTube automation from humble beginnings as a Minecraft creator earning no more than $100 per month of AdSense Revenue Noah now runs over 20 faceless
channels and he's barely out of his teens now when it comes to YouTube Automation and faceless channels I will be the first to confess I am a complete new and in my humble opinion of course faceless channels have somewhat of a controversial reputation so I spent an hour talking to Noah about his business model the thing I wanted to know most was could it be done by complete beginners like me and you let me spoil the answer for you now yes and especially after this video because Noah told me everything a step-by-step approach on how
to find the right Niche for the right people not to spend too much money but earn tons from it so let's just jump right in originally I found this Niche at the general School of court cases the second video Got 5 million views can also show the earnings this video go me I think $250 to produce and it ended up producing 20,000 us okay now based on that information I might just quit my job and start a faceless Channel but I'm going to need a niche right which of the best paying niches for me it's
Sports celebrity content crime related content and essentially everything that American people watch and American audiences just have higher RPM so some of these channels especially in Q4 can get insanely high RPMs on toing sometimes 14 to $15 RPMs so are there any standard techniques that you can teach us that will help us find niches like that it's a very consistent process you have to get a a hang off so I would be every day going on YouTube Incognito and refreshing my homepage and I'm pressing on the YouTube cashow content so YouTube would recommend me more
YouTube cashow content and I would be able to fight those new Channel Scanning recommend so that's one way I teach another way would be the keyword method where I would input random keywords like let's say basketball I would go to most View and this month and I would scroll through all the channels I would actually use vid IQ to essentially look at the subscriber gun and I would look at the amount of views um a channel uh would essentially have and then when I found a channel that has a bunch of views small amounts of
subscribers that would probably be a channel that started recently and if I found multiple channels like that I'm talking if they're getting above 200,000 views a video and very very consistently as well and there's maybe two or three of these types of channels that started recently that's when you find a gap in the market wow no what you've just told me right there is what other people might charge $5,000 for in a cost this is essentially a blueprint right for facial channels so let's say I found a bunch of channels like this what do I
do next so after you found that Niche you want to think about okay is it not too saturated you know you have two sites you can choose on YouTube automation either you make really really high quality content and you can basically get into every Niche or you just make sure you have that first mover's advantage and you produce less quality but you make sure your first to KN so that's step one always and then step two would be obviously come up with the topics I would suggest for your first few topics try to immunate what
the existing channels are doing so for example for the court cases channel right what I was doing is we see I first looked at court room which is the channel I was emulating but then I was thinking okay other than these topics on court room see if there's any other older related channels so in this case I was researching and I found out he was taking the topics original topics from the A&E YouTube channel so I started studying what videos did want on to pass on the A&E YouTube channel and uh which of those topics
haven't been done by Michael Panthers before and I'll take those topics and put them on my own channels obviously if you look at court cases I even integrated the trend of Jeffrey dmer at the time so you going to get very creative with it as long as your decisions on your channel are always backed by data normal YouTubers they would usually create topics based on feelings a lot of the times I see that happening but you really really want to make decisions based on data and what they want in the past so I'm guessing at
this point we're getting really close to the actual production of videos is that right so and a lot of people always say okay go straight away to higher script right there this is not the case you can definitely just start a YouTube channel and then eventually turn it into YouTube automation Channel that's very very doable when someone's never done YouTube I suggest they just start as a regular Creator the downside is very small you get experience firstand I know very well how to video edit I know very well how to script right but if you've
never done that before and immediately start hiring you're very disconnected with your theme right so script the videos yourself get an AI voice over they're getting really really good now and do the video adding yourself until you break even or you're making a profit and then start Outsourcing okay so this is encouraging now you're essentially saying that anyone can start out with zero budget and it might actually be the right way to do it to learn the craft but what if I wanted to build out a team like you what do I do you want
to find a team that carries the passion for you essentially you don't only Outsource the work you also Outsource the passion once you've identified your niche market your topic that's when you know who to hire for script writers I highly recommend finding someone who is passionate about the subject I would rather hire a script writer who knows nothing about future pretention and who is very very passionate then a script writer who is like a retention nerd but knows nothing about for example crime documentaries or tennis you need a script writer that matches the target audience
before you focus on retention cuz retention is something you're able to teach someone and passion you can teach so when I search someone for a specific sport I'll go into a Discord channel that has uh people who play that Sport and I'll ask like is there anyone interested in earning a little bit of money on side or I'll contact people who run a Blog about a specific sport these are really good places to get those script writers from do you have any specific advice on hiring voiceover artists and video editors voice over for actor doesn't
really matter just try to find someone again that matches or feels to your target audience so if it's crime find deep male voice if it's goship content try to find a high Girl voice your video edior doesn't necessarily have to have any affiliation with the niche or content itself just make sure they understand retention based editing very very well that they're able to tell stories very well through finding the right Clips to use online what about thumbnails because we know a lot of creators struggle with this faceless Channel or not the thumbnails at the start
I usually like the design myself simply because a lot of thumbnail designers are great designers but they're not good at understanding what makes an audience click if you look at the court cas's YouTube channel and you look at the thumbnails they're not very complicated but they got results you first want to teach yourself okay what type of thumbnails do work here then once your channel does well you want to start Outsourcing that process so now you teach the thumbnail designer and you give him inspiration for the thumbnail he simply does designing or putting the thumbnail
together and the cocept you still do and after a while of working together maybe a few months that's when you say okay now you do the full process now you're in full charge of making sure these videos get no you've already mentioned a lot of this point but what are we missing right now you mentioned retention hacks tell us more about that what I usually teach the script WR essentially is I send them all the channels of our competitors I say okay have a look what people are mentioning in the comments and also look at
the relative YouTube Ren if you hover about the YouTube labar you see this transparent up and down mountains above the YouTube play bar that's relative retention look at the relative retention and see where the points of interest are in the video and same thing for the comments it's like a library of understanding what people are interested in right the retention comes from understanding your audience mainly it's not about like secret editing hacks not so much it's about understanding what moves your audience to take action or to com to engage to watch more videos studying the
target audience in that way would be my biggest pretention all right I feel like I'm suddenly pumped for faceless channels and now thanks to you I have all of his strategies to start so what's the best case scenario how much can you make from YouTube automation with faceless channels in November of last year I think I did around $200,000 in a month in YouTube AdSense revenue and how much would you say on average it costs to start a faceless Channel beginners I would say it could probably take up to a month for them to get
started but for me personally it takes about two weeks to start up a channel to get that first video rolling and maybe to get to that first thousand to 10,000 confused I would start seeing a return at video number 12 but let's say the average Vehicles would be $100 that would cost me like $1,200 to break e for beginners I would say $3,000 $3,500 of videos that are $100 so 35 videos I think what would you say is the hardest thing about YouTube automation the hardest part would be a good thumbnail designer and a good
and I mean talking about lifting the lid on an entire YouTube industry you've just got it all right there if you do want to learn more about faceless channels and YouTube automation then follow Noah on Twitter link is in the description now Noah mentioned that one of the key components of a faceless Channel or any video for that matter is the editing of it and it turns out there are four editing secrets that will help you hack retention and this is how you do them
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