---
title: 'Gaules Giving Tips for Small Streamers'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=HH2oWMS7WnM'
video_id: 'HH2oWMS7WnM'
date: 2026-07-15
duration_sec: 425
---

# Gaules Giving Tips for Small Streamers

> Source: [Gaules Giving Tips for Small Streamers](https://youtube.com/watch?v=HH2oWMS7WnM)

## Summary

The speaker, Gaules, offers advice to small streamers, emphasizing that live streaming success has no fixed formula and requires patience, self-analysis, and active promotion. He stresses the importance of valuing every viewer, regardless of stream size, and maintaining consistent engagement.

### Key Points

- **No Formula for Success** [00:28] — Live streaming success has no formula; some streamers take six months, a year, or even seven years to grow.
- **Self-Analysis is Key** [01:10] — Streamers must perform self-analysis and understand that streaming involves more than just playing games—it requires promotion and community engagement.
- **Promotion is Essential** [01:40] — To attract viewers, streamers must promote their streams in groups, on social media, and talk to people. Low viewership is often due to lack of promotion, not poor content.
- **Treat Small Audiences Like Big Ones** [02:36] — Streamers should deliver the same quality for 15 viewers as for 5,000. Consistency builds word-of-mouth promotion.
- **Focus on Entertainment, Not Competition** [03:45] — The goal is to entertain, not just win games. Engaging with viewers is more important than competitive focus.
- **Be Present and Value Viewers** [04:44] — Many small streamers ignore their current audience while waiting for bigger opportunities. Valuing existing viewers is crucial for growth.

### Conclusion

Success in live streaming requires patience, active promotion, and genuine engagement with every viewer. Streamers should focus on entertaining their current audience rather than chasing larger numbers.

## Transcript

Hey [Music] Hey Hey
going to eat quickly, right? But before that, I know there are people waiting, right, for the tip from over there, and what I was saying, man, live streaming doesn't have a formula, there's nothing saying, man, live streaming doesn't have a formula, there's nothing you can say, like,
you can say, like, succeed in a year, if you don't get the results you expect, it's not because it's for you, you know? Pay attention, six months, if it's not for you, there are people who take
six months to start working, some take a year, some take seven years, right? I've seen cases of streamers who blew up after seven or eight years of live streaming, you know, man, they started in 2012 and blew up last year, this year, 2019, right?
And what I think needs to be done is self-analysis, you know? Doing self-analysis, you know? Doing live streaming, don't understand that doing a slab is you sitting at the computer, opening the streaming program, turning on the camera and
playing a game, and then people come, you know, damn, if there are only two people watching and they are  Friends, it's not because your live stream is bad, it's because you're not going after people to watch your live stream. Doing live streams
also means promoting them, joining groups, engaging on social media, and talking to people, you know, talking and saying things like, " Thank you, journalist, thank you for your gifts." It's not about
you looking and thinking, "Oh, what can I do? But I've already done that." Well, you're going to have to find a different way to do this, you know? You're going to have to look and think, " I need some way to start
bringing people to my live stream." I went there, I promoted it, I talked in the game groups I play, I talked in the Telegram group, with my family, friends, the condo, the parish, the school, and
now 15 people joined my live stream. For 15 people, you're not going to do a live stream with 15 people if you do n't need to. Okay, for 15 people, you're not going to do it for 30, or 50, or for me, or for 5,000, or for a
million, you know? That's the example.  What I use here is... if I don't do a "silver fight" (likely a slang term, possibly referring to a specific type of streaming service or event) here is... if I don't do a "silver fight" (likely a slang term, possibly referring to a specific type of streaming service or event) watching, even when streaming the lowest-level Counter-Strike
World Championship matches, I won't be able to get people to enjoy watching the best championships. You know, man? So the live stream be as good as the one you do for 5,000. Oh, but I'm not excited, man, you know?
One thing leads to another, one thing leads to another. If you have two people watching, three, and people say, "Man, look at this guy," you know, man? Look, take him, I'm going to promote him to someone, I'm going to tell someone, I'm going to talk about it, I'm going to
post it," people start advertising for you, but then the investment you need to make to bring people to the live stream starts to decrease because other people will do it for you, and
you'll be able to dedicate a little more time to your stream. And then you'll turn around and say, "Damn, do I have to take that into account with shipping? Am I while I'm playing?" The focus is on playing rather than paying
attention, because that's what I'm saying today. I'm going to play CS, and the less I care about you guys, the less I worry about them, the more I'm concerned about whether the check is going well, if the messages you sent, I try to see if it's something
fun, because if you're going to play CS focused on winning play CS focused on winning all the time and super competitive, it would be I don't do it to win the CS match, I do live streams to entertain
people and have fun, right? So within this context, I think you often need to look and say, "What have I been doing?" Because many times you'll get upset about this: "This isn't for me, this isn't for something else." Some
of the elements involved in doing a live stream are that you're not working hard, and another thing is that you're not being very motivated all the time. What
well all the time, but I think you need to be present all the time. But you're doing a live stream, and then the person comes in, and they see that the person is doing something, and then they think, "Man, there are many, many times that I..."  I'll take a look.
Someone sends a message. Hey Gal, hey, can you boost my stream? I'll take a look. I go in at the same time as the person, the person is streaming with person, the person is streaming with 20, 30, sometimes 40 people watching and
they're not doing absolutely anything. They're just there with a blank face, their browser open on the live stream, seeing if I'll see the message to promote them. And I think, brother, if you're not valuing the 30 or 40 people who are
valuing the 30 or 40 people who are watching you and you're waiting for someone to of people can join, and at that moment you're doing the smallest stream in the world, your live stream is crap, and that's why it's not working. Because when there are 30, 40, 50
people there, you're not present, so why problem is the channels that might be a little bigger. The problem isn't the problem, it's that you're doing something and you 're just watching. You're like someone who
're just watching. You're like someone who sometimes plays in a youth category and you look at the player who's in the main category and you're just looking and saying, "Damn, that guy over there, look!"  The car he's arriving in... Look at the way he's dressed...
Look at his uniform... Look at his cleats... Wow, I would be so happy if he called me to play there, you know, on the team with him... And you're not looking at the fact that there are a lot of people in the youth category wanting to play with you, wanting to
bond with you, people who want to watch you, and you don't even care who want to watch you, and you don't even care about those people... So this is something that, when I look at it within Universo das Lajes, it's a
little tip and suggestion before giving up, something you can look at and say, "Hey, if I'm not careful, I can give a little more attention to this... this thing here will work, right?"
work, right?" [Music]
