AI Summary
Six full-time Twitch streamers share how they got their first viewers and built a sustainable community. The key lesson: focus on discoverability and engagement, not fancy overlays or branding.
Chapters
Eljay introduces the video: six full-time streamers share how they grew from zero viewers to a sustainable community.
Reaps started with a niche game (60 Seconds) after a big streamer went offline, attracting viewers looking for more of that game. He advises sticking to one game for a month, setting a schedule, and engaging viewers.
OnlyTrails focused on a small community (Old School RuneScape) and found a unique way to play it. He made YouTube highlight videos, shared them on Reddit, and built a core audience that followed him to other games.
Metal chose a game with high followers but low active viewers (Pokémon Sword/Shield). He engaged viewers with repeatable stories, which kept them coming back.
CobbleWobbles brought a small YouTube audience (around 50 viewers) to Twitch. He committed to a niche (Nintendo games) and slowly expanded.
Mandy used existing Twitter relationships to get 10 viewers on her first stream. She emphasizes authentic connections over self-promotion.
Crescentine advises creating a Discord server and hosting offline events to build friendships among viewers, making the community self-sustaining.
Eljay concludes that all streamers focused on discoverability and engagement, not equipment or branding. The priority should be unique, engaging content.
The most effective growth strategy is to plan for discoverability and engagement before streaming, rather than focusing on aesthetics. Building a genuine community is key to long-term success.
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Mentioned in this Video
Study Flashcards (7)
What was Reaps' main advice for getting first viewers?
easy
Click to reveal answer
What was Reaps' main advice for getting first viewers?
Play a niche game that has a small but engaged audience, set a consistent schedule, and engage with viewers.
02:04
How did OnlyTrails make his stream stand out?
medium
Click to reveal answer
How did OnlyTrails make his stream stand out?
He found a unique way to play Old School RuneScape, created YouTube highlight videos, and shared them on niche Reddit communities.
04:50
What game did Metal choose and why?
medium
Click to reveal answer
What game did Metal choose and why?
Pokémon Sword and Shield, because it had 1.4 million followers but only 1,000–2,500 active viewers, making it easier to be discovered.
07:39
How did CobbleWobbles get his first viewers?
easy
Click to reveal answer
How did CobbleWobbles get his first viewers?
He brought a small YouTube audience (around 50 viewers) to Twitch by announcing his move and committing to a Nintendo niche.
10:08
What was Mandy's strategy for her first stream?
easy
Click to reveal answer
What was Mandy's strategy for her first stream?
She used existing Twitter relationships to announce her stream, resulting in about 10 viewers showing up.
12:46
What does Crescentine recommend to grow past a viewer plateau?
medium
Click to reveal answer
What does Crescentine recommend to grow past a viewer plateau?
Focus on building a community by creating a Discord server, hosting game/movie nights, and encouraging viewers to be friends with each other.
14:58
What is the overarching lesson from all six streamers?
hard
Click to reveal answer
What is the overarching lesson from all six streamers?
Prioritize discoverability and engagement over equipment or branding. Plan how to be found and how to keep viewers coming back.
16:39
💡 Key Takeaways
Niche Game Strategy
Reaps demonstrates that playing a niche game after a big streamer goes offline can attract viewers looking for more content.
02:04Niche Within a Niche
OnlyTrails shows how adding a unique twist to a game can make content stand out and attract a dedicated audience.
04:50Research & Storytelling
Metal's method of choosing a game with high followers but low active viewers is a smart discovery tactic, and using stories retains viewers.
07:39Cross-Platform Growth
CobbleWobbles proves that a small audience on another platform (YouTube) can be enough to kickstart a Twitch channel.
10:08Content Over Equipment
Eljay emphasizes that streamers should focus on unique content and discoverability rather than expensive gear or branding.
16:39Full Transcript
[00:00] every single video i get asked "Eljay, how do i get my first few viewers?" and i've answered that by making videos about how to get your first five to even 25 average viewers but that's just my opinion about how i think you should be doing it and how i did it so today i
[00:13] asked six full-time streamers how they grew their first few viewers but more importantly how they then took those first few viewers and grew them into a sustainable community that would grow further on twitch let's go hey i'm Eljay with streamscheme.com i'm also a variety
[00:33] streamer over at twitch.tv/eljayem_ there is a link in the description to that as i said today i have six full-time twitch streamers we're going to be talking about how they grew their first few viewers and then how they took that and turned it into an audience and a community that watched
[00:47] their streams now you've probably heard some of the advice in today's video before but there is something incredibly different about today's video they're not just gonna say hey go play a small category or go do just chatting segments no they're actually going to give you the specifics
[01:00] about how they did it exactly what category they played exactly how they made it watchable and hopefully it'll inspire you guys to get out there and do it yourself when you watch them one by one there are some fantastic lessons to learn but when you look at them as a whole there is one
[01:16] really powerful thing that you can take away from all of it so i'm going to cover that at the end of the video but because i know i've been saving the best tips for the end of the video a lot lately i'm also going to make it worth your while by throwing in a couple of owned tv 50 vouchers
[01:30] so if you want to win those vouchers and get your twitch stream looking scpick and span then just stay tuned i'll cover how to enter that draw very soon now there are links in the description go check them out while they're live first up we have reaps who is an amazing australian streamer
[01:46] with some production quality that i think even the largest streamers on the platform wish they had and he's gonna be talking about how he managed to grow entirely on twitch which is something you on twitch so reef's gonna cover that take it away hi guys my name is reaps and it is an absolute
[02:04] pleasure to come back and talk to you about some advice on how to get those first few viewers when you've done nothing at all inside the twitch atmosphere the first time that i ever came on twitch i had no background on twitter on youtube or anything i was starting fresh this was my first
[02:20] foray into social media and what i noticed very quickly was that the big time streamers were playing variety games so back in the day sodapopham was playing this game called 60 seconds and i was like i've got that game i should stream that game i'm gonna stream it right now so i was
[02:36] streaming this game that nobody really played along with sodapoppin and as soon as soda pop and got offline people like you know what i want to see more of this game so they came over to me and there i was not on the first you know fortnight or league of legends or anything like
[02:51] that i was playing a niche game and that's where people find you because if you play those big time games you're not going to be found people don't go scrolling down to people with zero viewers just to be a good sole unless they want that youtube revenue for saying i donated x amount to small
[03:05] times dreamer but the chance of that happening are very very very slim if you do variety straight off the bat chances are people come and follow you during one game but if you don't play at the next
[03:18] stream they may be like oh i thought i thought you wanted to play this game and i was really into that you can grow obviously but just give it some time of sticking to one game for about a month or so and then slowly initiate another game into it and i must say my biggest piece of advice if you
[03:33] want your five to ten followers to come back set a schedule and stick to it no matter what sometimes people don't get those notifications sometimes people aren't following you on the discord or on twitter so i just say stick to it go with the schedule when people come in say thank you so much
[03:49] let them know when you stream and get on with the game that was how i got my first five to ten viewers and from there it's gone up astronomically with a schedule i hope that sorted some of you out and um leads you down a good path you're gonna do amazing i'll see you next time guys
[04:05] summarize reaps if you didn't quite understand you need to take a step back and before you start streaming do some planning and research what categories can you appear in who's watching what what niche are you gonna fill it doesn't matter if the potential audience is only 20 to 30 when
[04:20] you're starting out because you're starting at zero and 20 and 30 people is a huge amount of viewers when you're just starting once you're in that niche category you pick a schedule you lock it in and you work to bond with your audience this keeps those people coming back and it allows you
[04:35] to boost your numbers and eventually transition to variety streaming next up we've got only trails he's going to be talking about how he used not only a niche game but also a unique way of streaming that game to create a huge following and a massive audience take it away trails yo what up
[04:50] guys it's trails or only trails and how did i get from five to like 10 or 50 viewers well i focused on very small communities at first i started focusing on a game that has a small community but a lot of people watch for me that was old school runescape but that was not enough i looked into a
[05:05] niche within that game i found another way to play the game so people are more interested in watching my streams than other people's streams because i was doing something different i started making youtube videos around this concept and i shared it on small reddit communities that were about
[05:18] playing the game old school runescape differently i know it gets a little bit tricky but if you can find an original way to play a game that already exists within a small community and that is your game plan at least it was for me i bundled up these videos into highlight videos on youtube
[05:31] stream now the problem with this is that it gets really difficult to venture into variety games because a lot of people are there to see that specific thing of you but i found a little fix for that now after a while you'll start building relationships with your viewers and you'll gain
[05:46] like a core audience that will follow you no matter what take this core audience and just stream another game once a week or something like that even if you go from 100 viewers to like 20 that core audience will follow you and you'll have a viewer base for that other game now when you're
[05:59] playing this other game try and host someone that is also playing that game that you don't know and start interacting with their community so you become friends with people from other communities this way this streamer might return to favor give you a host or a raid and initially raids and hosts
[06:11] and stuff like that so as a conclusion try and build your niche within a small community and then try and build that core audience bring them to a variety game and then start making friends within
[06:23] that other games community that's it i absolutely love this advice by trails because he went into streaming with a plan not only was he gonna play a niche game but he was also going to play it in a way that allowed him to stand out and be unique i often talk about small ant and how he created a
[06:40] niche inside a niche in a similar way by playing games blindfolded or with his feet this is exactly what trails has done as well he's taken his niche game and he's played it in a way that adds stakes it adds a unique engaging factor when you take all those things you put them into a highlight video
[06:54] and you drop them on youtube but you don't just sit there and hope that's gonna work you then take those highlight videos and you share them out to communities and subreddits who are interested in those games and playing those games in a unique way this is so much more discoverable than if he
[07:09] just played runescape and just did his best and maybe chucked out a crappy let's play and just hoped there's a strategy here there's a way to be discovered and there's a way to make it engaging and clearly it's worked next up we have metal fair who you guys gave so much positive feedback to
[07:24] you said that his advice about networking was the best tip of our last video this time around he's going to talk about how some careful research into a category and the right time to stream allowed him to go from zero viewers to 75 with a little help of some engaging stories being told over and
[07:39] over again take it away medal hey everyone what i did to get my first few viewers was i found a game that had a large following but did not have a lot of people actively viewing it at the time that i streamed that game was pokemon sword and shield at the moment it has 1.4 million followers but only
[07:56] between 1 thousand to two and a half thousand people that were viewing it when i streamed and that meant that when i was live i wasn't too far down the list for people to scroll through now once i got a couple of viewers trickling in what i had to do was i had to engage them now
[08:10] to do that i told stories really fun interactive and engaging stories that kept people's attention these could be stories about real life my job as a full-time teacher or about the game that i'm playing all right boys and girls come on round come on around grandpa's going to tell your story
[08:28] one of the best things about being a small stream is then you can repeat those stories if you're telling a story for only a couple of viewers between zero and three people and then you'd tell that same story again the next day or a couple of days later those same people might not be in the
[08:42] stream again and if they are that means they're enjoying your content and they probably don't mind hearing that same story again and again even now after growing my stream i still get people that ask me to tell the same stories again and again and i'm sure there's people that have heard a
[08:55] story ten plus times but still enjoy it and each time you tell it it's a little bit different you might be able to embellish a little small detail you might want to add a little bit more that you didn't add last time and people always love the stories i hope you found those helpful guys have
[09:08] a great time streaming hopefully you're starting to see a trend here with these first three clips no one went into this and just hoped for the best everyone went in with a careful game plan a way to stand out in a way to be discovered now we have three more streamers left who are going to
[09:22] talk about external platform growth as well as how to grow as a community but of course we've still got my lesson that i took away from these six streamers as well as the owned voucher giveaway consider checking out our other content we've got videos about all sorts of things streaming related
[09:39] whether it's an affiliate guide whether it's an emote guide it doesn't matter check it out and if those help you maybe consider subscribing and finally i've managed to finish up our glitch pack that's right you guys have been asking for this for ages it'll be released later in this week
[09:52] in our discord next up we have the legend himself mr cobble wobbles and he's gonna be talking about how he took a very small youtube audience and converted them into a twitch following in order to grow straight off the bat take it away com if i remember correctly my first five viewers
[10:08] actually came from youtube because when i started twitch i had done youtube for a few years i basically had like a core audience like around 50 people-ish that watched almost every video
[10:21] that i put out i announced that i was quitting youtube because i was really sick of it and i wanted to still make content so i moved over to twitch with live streaming right out of the gate i would have like an average of five viewers so that's a tip that i can give you if you start
[10:37] your twitch channel and you've probably heard this like a million times before but also start doing something on different platforms to bring those people over to your twitch because that actually works a different thing that i then did to like enhance those viewers from like 5 to 10 15 20
[10:57] is committing to a niche and you've probably heard this before as well and the reason why you've heard it before as well is because well it works i started playing exclusively nintendo games if you commit to a niche you can really speak to a specific audience after committing to that
[11:14] niche you can branch out to different games that are kind of similar to the things that you're playing but also innovate in a new way and then you can slowly branch out even more
[11:26] until you eventually might become like a variety streamer or something that's basically how i did it alfred here completely endorses it alfred here is the mastermind behind all this i'm i'm i'm just the puppet he's the he's the real he's the real content creator
[11:41] you might be thinking straight off the bat well he had an audience somewhere else so that's not helpful advice but if that is your first thought then i think you're missing the point if your goal is to be a streamer but you can't find your niche to stand out on twitch
[11:54] with zero viewers the same way reaps did the same way metal did or the same way trails did then don't stream yet go and create content on another platform discoverable content and build a small audience i know a lot of you guys think that in order for a youtuber a tick tock audience
[12:09] to help boost your stream it needs to have 100 to 500 viewers every video when in reality all it needs is 20 to 50 because those will convert to 5 maybe 10 viewers over on twitch and that's enough
[12:22] don't understand that that prior following in order to boost your stream doesn't have to be an influencer following t with mandy is a fantastic streamer and she's gonna be talking today about
[12:34] how she used her prior following from twitter to launch her twitch stream and go from there hey my name is mandy i am a partnered streamer over on twitch and i've been streaming for about three
[12:46] years or so so i'm here to answer the question how did i get my first five to ten viewers uh so for me they pretty much all came from the same place and that was twitter i used twitter
[12:59] quite frequently before i started to stream and i had quite a few relationships on there especially the people who were gamers as well yeah when i did my first stream i announced it on twitter and then i had about 10 people who showed up to my very first stream which is
[13:17] that's amazing it was incredible it was very exciting it was comfy for me it was it was super nice it was awesome i i feel like it kind of helped me skip that very first like difficult step of uh getting you know getting those very first few viewers so yeah you can use any kind of social
[13:33] media uh you can even use irl just get to know people make friends um and just be authentic be genuine don't uh use people because they can see that you can you can feel if you're being
[13:46] you know used just so somebody has a viewer but yeah just genuinely try to form relationships build friendships and eventually you know if you do that you'll meet people who will want to either consume your content they're excited about what you're doing or they like you and they just
[14:02] want to support you or or maybe both which would be awesome so anyway thanks for listening there is no huge marketing plan here and it also covers a question you guys ask me all the time which is why i really value this advice constantly you guys say i don't have any friends who can come
[14:18] actively do enjoy anyway such as reddit tick tock twitter maybe it's a discord instagram you name it if you spend your time there and create genuine connections and then turn around and say to people
[14:32] hey i'm actually going to try to become a twitch streamer it really helped me out if you could just check me out or maybe lurk or even just give me some feedback obviously as long as not breaking any self-promotion rules i'm sure those people would love to check you out if you built a real
[14:44] genuine connection i've saved the final and one of the most important tips for last today and it's from crezentine we're gonna hear from her and then i'm gonna talk about the lesson i learned by watching all six of these clips and i'm gonna be giving away that own 3d voucher so stay tuned
[14:58] hey guys what's up it's me chris from twitch.tv slash crescent early on you'll probably hit the plateau of three to five viewers potentially five to ten viewers and then you'll realize
[15:10] that no matter how long you stream your stream never grows and these new viewers just seem to change and always find other streamers or content to watch the way to grow past these plateaus is really to focus on building a community when new viewers come into your stream welcome them warmly
[15:27] and then invite them to a discord server on your discord server you can even host game nights or movie nights to interact with them offline and the goal here is really to create a community by having these people not only be friends with you the streamer but also be friends
[15:42] with each other and that's really how a community starts to build i see a big issue in some streams where the viewers are only there for the streamer which means that if the streamer stops interacting
[15:54] and starts focusing on what they're doing chat instantly dies and this is something that you want to avoid so it's really best to create a community and start introducing people to each other focusing on offline interaction as well as online interaction you guys know i think this advice is
[16:12] crucial every single growth video i do i talk about how it doesn't matter how many followers you have it doesn't matter how many viewers you have it's about a community it's about having people who engage with each other engage with you are active in your chat and your discord that is
[16:26] how you become a sustainable twitch streamer there really isn't much else to say about chris's advice so let's give away that voucher and let's cover the final tip that i learned from watching this video if you listen to every single streamer today and when they talk about growing their
[16:39] average viewers they thought about two things the first how they were going to be discovered and the second is how they would make their content engaging or stand out that people would come back no streamer in this video said you needed to buy a six thousand dollar throat
[16:54] guzzler 5000 microphone no one said you need to have the fanciest overlay in fact no one even talked about panels branding no one talked about your offline screen so why is it that so many small streamers even the ones in the stream scheme discord spend so much time on their panels
[17:11] they're offline screen changing their branding spending hours getting a logo for their stream then they go live and there's no discovery there they're just still playing a game like everyone else there's no unique way to stand out maybe they haven't even put time into their title and
[17:26] there's certainly no time put into the thumbnail so really there's no reason for someone to click you you guys know that i put so much emphasis on my title you guys know i put so much emphasis when i started on making my thumbnail look good i green screened myself into a milk aisle so people
[17:40] thought what the heck and had to click me you need to find a way to make your content stand out that should be your number one step not an offline screen it doesn't matter no one's coming to you when you're offline work on making your content unique and engaging
[17:56] so in order to allow you to keep focusing on your content i'm gonna give away these owned vouchers it's not a sponsored video i just have some vouchers for you all you have to do is go down to the comments and type hashtag own3d your twitch username so i can get in contact and which person
[18:09] today's advice you liked the best i'll see you guys next week and remember content comes first