[00:02] posting the exact same clips I used to, only to end up making a few thousand dollars. So, what was the difference? Most people think clipping is just about people's content, but in reality, there is a huge opportunity here. The thing [00:15] just make you money. It promotes whatever it is you're clipping to advertising. You're giving these creators and brands tons of free exposure all over the world, and all you're getting in return is a 20 to 50 [00:29] cent CPM that TikTok and these other platforms are paying you. So, let's do the math. If your video blows up with a 15 cent CPM and gets 3 million views, you're only making $450. $450 for showing 3 million people that [00:43] kind of like a scam. Because what these these creators, brands, and podcasters are willing to pay you directly to make those same videos for them. And all of this is actually happening on a platform [00:56] you might have heard about, but if you haven't, it's basically where creators, brands, or streamers launch campaigns and pay anywhere from 1 to even $10 per thousand views for you to make content for them. This isn't a YouTube Shorts 30 [01:09] cent CPM type of deal here. I'm talking live active campaigns where you get a million views and you get paid $2,000. But here's the thing, you're only going videos. So, first, let me show you exactly how to turn into this content [01:22] disgusting amount of money that people are throwing around now. So, I'm going guarantee you've had. How do you even find these viral moments to make clips you join a campaign, what makes it really easy is that the creator or brand [01:37] requirements and content to make videos about. So, not only do you get the content that you have to make videos about given, but you also get paid 10 to would posting for a regular platform. But how do you go above and beyond to be [01:50] the one that actually makes the most out of these campaigns and earn more than all of the other creators that are just following the basic requirements? Well, Rogan. In the campaign details, his team would probably give you a list of five [02:03] which would be good enough. But if you want to actually have an edge, go to the highlighted timestamps. [music] And if those comments have a lot of views, people enjoyed that part, too. So, what that means for you is going to that [02:16] specific section in the video, clipping it up, and posting it into the campaign. that people enjoyed this section because that comment has tons of likes, which is of the other creators just going for random moments. [02:29] smart one who makes the videos. >> I've talked about this before, but looking for clips that trigger emotional reactions are honestly like number one priority. People are driven off emotions, they reply and like to videos [02:41] off of emotions because they get angry, sad, or even jealous. This is more seconds of the video. You need to create a feeling immediately. If chat goes something, or that insane moment you wait 2 hours in a movie to watch, is the [02:57] here. But here is where most people mess it up because they include way too much people to know something is going to happen, but not so much that they get your viral moment, you've now hit the part where 90% of creators just screw [03:12] themselves over. They think finding the clip is the hard part, but in reality, making it into an entertaining video is what separates the $200 a month clippers versus the $20,000 a month ones. And because I want to genuinely help you [03:24] nice guy, I'm going to rapid-fire five specific editing techniques to make your out. Instantly start with the reaction or the best point, then cut it out reaction. Second, start slowly zooming in on the person's face or add some type [03:40] to the climax. You want to make it obvious to the people watching that and if you don't, they're going to have no clue. Next is trying to experiment they say something serious, make it green when they're being funny. At the [03:53] end of the day, you need to get people to stay stimulated. I'm not sitting past Subway Surfers in the bottom half. That's how cooked I am. So, just even looks color-wise is going to make a big difference to people watching your [04:07] the algo. But here's probably the most important one. You need to think of the beginning, you tease them, then it goes to the middle where you're giving at the end when you give them exactly what they clicked on the video for. But [04:21] important than knowing what to do, and that's knowing what not to do. You could channel, but if you slip up on just one of the next few things I'm going to go overnight. And if you're making as much as some of these creators are on Content [04:35] Rewards, that's probably not the move. First rule is that kids are off-limits. Even if it's just a bit of an innocent moment, you want to be careful about how these social media platforms take it very seriously, and sometimes like to [04:47] flag channels because they include children. So, it's a risky line that you never including blood next to kids or anything that even could resemble violence. Same thing applies to just genuinely dangerous content. Normal [05:00] clipping or making content for something that's actually reckless or dangerous in careful about how you portray that in the edit. You either have to cover it up very well or not make videos about it in the first place. Third is excessive [05:13] few bleeps here and there, but if the first few seconds of your video is constant cursing, that's not going to pay off too well for you. So, at least beginning. But here's the most important one. Do not post clips that make the [05:26] rather get a million views of people talking amazing about me than 100 name. The person who's paying you to make these videos wants to improve their brand image or sell products. And 99.9% of the times in the campaign [05:40] requirements whenever you join, you'll see that they make this a core part of You get views, you get paid, and they're happy. Everybody wins. But now that you you're actually here for. How do you make real money from all of this? Like I [05:54] platform called Content Rewards that is making people a disgusting amount of same is very straightforward. Go to the every campaign that is currently active. There's people with budgets from [06:07] anywhere from 100 to 100,000 dollars. [music] You apply to the ones that you and then you go ahead and submit clips that get you paid. And now, instead of make from YouTube or TikTok, you know exactly what you're going to get paid up [06:20] front because it quite literally says it on the campaign. This one, for example, this one is paying four. And I've also even seen campaigns that pay as high as 7 to 10 dollars per thousand views. That's long for money for 30-second [06:33] is that not only are you making money from these campaigns, but you also get fact that there's hundreds of campaigns active at any time, you can quite literally work on five in the same day, get results for all of them, and get [06:46] this, I didn't want to limit any creators from only making money through happens and it all gets snapped away tomorrow, you go back to zero. Trust me, I've had experience with this. This isn't some method that I hope works for [07:00] launched this in beta just a couple months ago, and there's actual people that have made $40,000, $20,000, $8,000, and it's not even like it's a handful, watching this video, you should know everything about how to get started and [07:14] how to make the best videos. So, go sign up to your first campaign and get paid.