[00:01] scale an automated YouTube channel to a stable $1,000 or $3,000 per month. I know this video will give you absolute clarity with eight simple steps that will automated channels. These are steps that have personally helped me take channels [00:17] to millions and millions of views every month, with hundreds of thousands of views every 48 hours. For example, with these same steps, I've been able to scale two of my Ninja students' channels, like the one by the great Hy, one of my [00:29] Ninja students, whom I took from absolute zero. He was a complete uploaded a video to YouTube in his life, and I took him to over 1,300 monetized views in less than 24 days. Having these points, already [00:43] help you tremendously to multiply your income, take your views to millions per month, and have so much clarity that you'll be able to scale not just one channel, but multiple automated channels. Now, if you don't follow [00:57] these points that I'm going to share with you in the next few minutes, you'll... to literally cost hundreds and hundreds of hours and probably thousands of dollars lost anywhere. So believe me, it's in your best interest to stay and let's begin. Step [01:10] number one, or point number one, straight to the point with valuable information: point with valuable information: you must dedicate as much time as possible to selecting the right niche. Believe me, nothing [01:22] influences the success or failure of an automated channel more than the correct niche selection. Now, many will share methods for finding profitable niches, and you'll find [01:34] supposed automation gurus on Instagram with PDFs listing the best niches to monetize in 2025. It's all garbage. 99% of those stupid niches will lead you to channels with zero views, and that's what you don't want. You do n't want to invest time and [01:47] money in a channel that will end up with zero visits. Now, one thing I've seen is that there's a positive relationship between the number of hours you dedicate to researching and analyzing niches and the probability of them [01:59] going viral. Now, this doesn't mean that... Just because a niche looks good, of thousands or millions of views, doesn't mean it's worth entering that topic. There are certain steps I always share with my ninjas—a [02:12] series of filters to get the green light or have the peace of mind that we're going to invest time and money in a niche that has the potential to three tips? Number one: that it's a [02:24] recently created channel; number two: that it's a niche where the topic average around one million views per month; and number three: that it's a niche that previously worked in an English-speaking market. This is a [02:38] general filtering process that I'm sharing quickly for this video. Obviously, my methodology for selecting ninja niches would require hours and hours of for my students. But believe me, what I've just shared is enough [02:53] for you to find your first three to five profitable niches and get your channels generating your first $1,000 to $3,000. Yes, I'm not charging you for this. Information that many other gurus easily charge for is free [03:05] share with you in this video is to conduct a deep, but genuinely competitor channels in the niche you want to enter. By deep analysis, I mean spend time consuming [03:19] content from that niche. There's no better way to understand the group of people your channel will target. There's no better way to understand the type of viral video ideas that truly have the potential to reach 100,000, 200,000, or 1 [03:31] content yourself. If you want to open an excellent sushi restaurant, the all the restaurants, or the best sushi restaurants, in your city, try them, and spend time looking at the menus. Why? So that you can build your [03:45] worked for your competitors and references. This restaurant analogy applies perfectly to YouTube automation. The more time competitors and references, the better you'll know what kind of content, and therefore the [04:01] know how profitable it can be. It will become something you can achieve over time because if you already see that there are five channels in the same niche you want to enter that have maintained a stable average of views for years, then [04:14] Think of this second step as in- depth research of those already in the niche you want to enter. Take what works, optimize it, improve it; discard what isn't working for them, and thus [04:28] avoid many mistakes along the way. Tip number three, especially automated channels, since you already have your reference channels—those channels from which you'll take inspiration for your own video ideas— [04:41] step three is to take 30 viral ideas. You're going to go to, for example, I always recommend having between five and ten reference channels, go to their we can do is take 10 reference channels and, [04:56] as an artist, steal their five most viral ideas, the five most viral ideas from each of these channels, and that way you end up with a list of 30 videos that you Niche, but not just any video idea; it's a proven viral video idea. [05:10] content. So, we already have the ideas; now we have to produce and create them. And here, Scenario number one is that you're going to create all the content, and scenario number two is that you're going to delegate the content creation to [05:25] a team. Now, in case you don't have the money to delegate, to people who will be dedicated to publishing the video, making the thumbnail, etc.—in case you want to do everything yourself, or you have no other option, or you don't have the money to [05:37] invest, then you have to organize your work into time blocks to be many videos as possible. For example, I would dedicate a whole day just to researching the ideas, extracting these 30 video ideas, creating [05:51] the scripts, and maybe modifying them a little with an like ChatYPT. Another full day I would dedicate to extracting all the audio from those scripts, converting the text to speech with artificial intelligence, and for this, there are [06:05] many platforms like Labs or LoopVoice. Another full day would be dedicated to video editing, and finally, the last day would be used to schedule all the content and design the thumbnails for these 30 videos. For me, this is [06:18] do everything: create the content in blocks of time and by day. One day I do this, one day I do another activity, another day I do a different by video, saying, "Oh, I'm going to take this [06:31] video through AI for the voiceover, then edit it, then make the thumbnail." You do everything in blocks, all the content for a whole month, and that way you save a lot of time. Now, if you want to delegate everything, that [06:45] you have money to delegate and hire editors, scriptwriters, things will be easier, especially at the beginning. You have to learn a lot about management, you have to learn a lot about systems and operations so that the [06:58] business can function without you. And here, I would 100% recommend that, first of all, you have previously exposed yourself to each of the activities. You're going to delegate, but you can't teach an editor how you want the work done if you have [07:10] basic editing yourself. You can't teach a virtual assistant how to schedule content or configure the description and tags of your video if you haven't done it yourself, at least with 10 or 15 videos. That's why I recommend to [07:23] many of my students—my ninja students— even though they have money and could delegate, " Hey, do it yourself." First, do the whole process yourself. First, understand how the complete automation works [07:35] easier to delegate. Now, one delegate everything anyway and want to invest in equipment from the very beginning, create what we'll call operations manuals. For each [07:49] employee, for each process—whether it's sound engineering, editing, or text-to-speech—create job specifications, outlining what they have to be doing. This way, there's clarity. [08:05] person has to do, and the process is much smoother. Now, the fifth piece of advice I would recommend is that whenever you create an automated channel, many people forget when creating their first [08:19] channel. What do I mean by verification? There are three verifications that you absolutely must do for your channel, even before uploading your first video. people don't do, and it's one of the reasons why your channel is probably not going [08:34] viral or is getting zero views on your videos. I'm referring to views on your videos. I'm referring to go to YouTube Studio, to the settings section, then to the [08:47] channel feature eligibility section. There you'll find three verifications. The first one is automatic; it's already checked (green). enter your phone number. You'll receive an SMS (text message); you enter [09:01] third verification that you must do to properly optimize your channel before... Uploading a video requires you to take a picture of your official ID or send Google a video of your face to verify that, even though it's [09:15] a real person behind it. tips I want to share in this video, which will seriously make a results and numbers, are: Strive for [09:30] consistency, not perfection; focus on content volume rather than quality. I know this might sound like unusual advice, but it comes from someone who literally generates hundreds of millions of views [09:43] on my channels every month. The one who uploads more, not the one with the best quality, earns more. This is especially true for not the one with the best quality, earns more. This is especially true for your first channels and are n't yet profitable or making any [09:55] money from automation, what you need to do is upload a high volume of content— multiple videos daily—to your channel, videos of at least 8 minutes. But don't chase quick results. That's the seventh piece of advice I'd give you. And if you check [10:08] my Instagram stories, I one of my students every single day because I literally don't have If a student isn't getting probably seeing in my stories that most of my students monetize [10:22] channels in 7, 10, 15, or less than 30 days, you shouldn't expect that, especially if you don't have me as your free information on YouTube, of course you'll be able to scale some [10:35] automated channels, monetize them, etc., but don't expect it to be instant. You'll take much longer if you don't have someone to support you, and that brings me to my last point: Find someone who has the results you want. Find a mentor. [10:47] obsessed with in almost all my videos because having mentors changed my life. revenue level has been obscene. earn every month, you wouldn't believe me. I'd literally have to show you my [11:00] bank statements so you can see how much money I make now that I have mentors helping me, versus before when I didn't. Now, one mentors is crucial, and no one will tell you this: just listen to people who have [11:14] the results you want. Again, it's a phrase I always say; I sound like a broken record, but it's the truth. You don't go to a nutritionist—or I wouldn't listen to a nutritionist who's obese—or I wouldn't listen to a dentist with crooked teeth. So why would [11:26] automation guru who gives you advice on growing channels if their channels don't even reach 1 million views a month? You have to be very on this channel, and in my stories [11:39] as well, I constantly share the results from my own channels. That's how I gain authority, not because I'm making little videos about how to automate, but because I actually do automation. I make a lot of money [11:51] from automation; I'm not making most of my money selling you little courses like most of the snake oil salesmen on Instagram. But hey, in the end, it's your decision. I believe that these eight tips, when implemented, will make a [12:03] complete difference to your channels because, ultimately, automation isn't about theory or figuring things out. How many courses I take and how many videos I watch is irrelevant; eight tips I just shared won't do any good if you don't implement them. So turn off this video, [12:16] go automate, make the necessary changes, and we'll see you in the necessary changes, and we'll see you in the next one.