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How to Get Millions of YouTube Views with SEO (Not Virality)

Transcribed Jul 14, 2026
Intermediate 4 min read For: Content creators, YouTubers, and digital marketers looking to grow a channel through SEO rather than virality.

AI Summary

This video reveals how certain YouTube channels achieve millions of monthly views by focusing on search engine optimization (SEO) for both YouTube and Google, rather than chasing viral trends. The presenter breaks down a three-step strategy: finding search-driven topics, optimizing videos with a ranking checklist, and capitalizing on AI-powered search.

[00:00]
The Search-First Formula

Instead of copying others or following their heart, successful channels choose topics that people actively search for on YouTube and Google every month. This leads to consistent, compounding views.

[01:30]
Example: Teacher's Tech

This channel has over 1 million subscribers and got 16 million views in the past month, mostly from search. Its videos don't go viral but consistently rank for search queries.

[02:30]
Finding Search Topics with Ahrefs

Use Ahrefs Site Explorer on youtube.com/watch, go to organic keywords, filter for top 3 keywords related to your niche. This reveals what people search for on both platforms.

[03:15]
The Ranking Checklist

Titles must contain the exact keyword. Descriptions should summarize the video with the keyword in the first lines. Timestamps help create chapters that appear in Google search.

[04:30]
Title and Thumbnail Teamwork

The title handles the keyword, the thumbnail sells the click. They should complement, not repeat. CTR is a ranking factor.

[05:15]
Say the Keyword in the Video

Google's VP of Search confirmed that Google understands audio and video content. Saying the target keyword and related terms helps ranking. Be thorough, not keyword-stuffed.

[06:15]
Match the Search Intent Format

Before scripting, search the keyword on YouTube and Google. If top results are tutorials, make a tutorial. Don't reinvent the format.

[07:00]
AI Search Opportunity

YouTube is the most cited domain in Google's AI overviews. Use Ahrefs Brand Radar to find queries where AI pulls YouTube videos, then create content for those topics.

Search-driven YouTube growth offers consistent, high-intent views that compound over time, unlike viral spikes. By optimizing for both traditional and AI search, creators can build a sustainable channel.

Clickbait Check

85% Legit

"Title accurately promises a strategy for YouTube growth via SEO, and the video delivers actionable steps."

Mentioned in this Video

Tutorial Checklist

1 00:00 Use the search-first formula: choose topics people search for monthly on YouTube and Google.
2 02:30 Find search topics using Ahrefs Site Explorer: enter youtube.com/watch, go to organic keywords, filter for niche-related keywords.
3 03:15 Apply the ranking checklist: include exact keyword in title, summarize video in description with keyword in first lines, add timestamps.
4 04:30 Make title and thumbnail work as a team: title handles keyword, thumbnail sells the click.
5 05:15 Say the target keyword and related terms in the video naturally; be thorough.
6 06:15 Match search intent format: check top results for the keyword and create similar format (tutorial, listicle, etc.).
7 07:00 Optimize for AI search: use Ahrefs Brand Radar to find queries where AI pulls YouTube videos, then create content for those topics.

Study Flashcards (9)

What is the 'search-first formula' for YouTube topics?

easy Click to reveal answer

Choose topics that people search for every month on YouTube and Google, rather than copying others or following your heart.

How much monthly views did Teacher's Tech get from search?

easy Click to reveal answer

Over 16 million views in the past month.

01:30

What tool and method are recommended to find search topics?

medium Click to reveal answer

Use Ahrefs Site Explorer on youtube.com/watch, go to organic keywords, filter for top 3 keywords related to your niche.

02:30

What are the three elements of the ranking checklist?

medium Click to reveal answer

1) Title contains exact keyword. 2) Description summarizes video with keyword in first lines. 3) Add timestamps for chapters.

03:15

How should title and thumbnail work together?

medium Click to reveal answer

Title handles the keyword, thumbnail sells the click. They should complement, not repeat each other.

04:30

Why is saying the keyword in the video important?

hard Click to reveal answer

Google's VP of Search confirmed that Google understands audio and video content, so saying the keyword helps ranking.

05:15

What should you do before scripting a video?

medium Click to reveal answer

Search the target keyword on YouTube and Google, look at top results, and match the format (e.g., tutorial, listicle).

06:15

Which domain is most cited in Google's AI overviews?

easy Click to reveal answer

YouTube.

07:00

How can you find topics to optimize for AI search?

hard Click to reveal answer

Use Ahrefs Brand Radar, enter a popular brand or channel, go to topics report, filter for youtube.com domain mentioned.

07:00

💡 Key Takeaways

⚖️

Search-First Formula

Shifts focus from viral gambling to predictable search traffic.

📊

Teacher's Tech Example

Demonstrates that consistent search views can surpass viral spikes.

01:30
🔧

Ranking Checklist

Provides actionable, specific optimization steps for YouTube SEO.

03:15
💡

Google Understands Audio Content

Direct quote from Google VP confirms importance of spoken keywords.

05:15
💡

AI Search Opportunity

Identifies YouTube as top domain in AI overviews, a growing traffic source.

07:00

✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

No viral clips found for this video, or they are still being generated.

Everyone on YouTube is using the same playbook. Click-baity titles, crazy thumbnails with shock faces, and an edit that's optimized for retention. But when everyone does the same thing, it leads to saturation and mediocre results. But I found a handful of YouTube channels doing the exact opposite. Boring titles, simple thumbnails, and basic edits. And they're pulling in millions of free views every single month. And that's because they're not fighting for the YouTube algorithm's attention, they're fighting for

Google's. And in this video, I'm going to break down exactly how these channels use YouTube SEO and Google SEO, so you can get these kinds of results for yourself. And it all starts with step one, the search first formula. When choosing topics for YouTube, most people do one of two things. They either copy other successful YouTubers, or they follow their heart and make something they want to talk about. And sometimes these videos go viral. Huge spikes

in browse and suggested views. Dopamine hit is unreal. But for most people, it's basically gambling because you just don't know if people will be interested in that topic, or if YouTube will spread that video. So, your results will be wildly inconsistent with zero predictability. Now, the channels I found rarely go for these Hail Mary videos. Instead, [music] they choose topics people search for every month in both Google and YouTube, whether it's trending or not. And this

leads to consistent views that compound over time. That's exactly what Teacher's Tech does. The thumbnails are pretty standard. The titles aren't click-baity at all, just tutorials on basic tech topics. [music] And despite having over a million subscribers, their new videos don't get hundreds of thousands of views in a few days [music] like typical large YouTube channels do. But here's the thing. His channel got over 16 million views this past month, and just look how consistent his

views are month to month. These aren't viral hits, they're search hits. Someone types a problem into YouTube or Google. This channel's video shows up, and it happens every single day. Now, most of his traffic comes from YouTube organic search, but I actually checked all 507 of his videos to see how much traffic he gets from Google. And according to Ahrefs Site Explorer, it's an estimated 456,000 views [music] from Google search alone. And just look at that

views graph. See how consistently it ramps up? Beautiful. So, how do you find topics like this for your niche? Go to Ahrefs Site Explorer and enter www.youtube.com/watch. Then go to the organic keywords report to see the keywords YouTube ranks for in Google. >> [music] >> Then just set a filter for top three keywords where keywords include words related to your niche. And now you've got a list of keywords people actually search on YouTube and [music] Google.

But here's where most people mess things up. They pick a keyword, stuff it into the title and tags, and hope for the best. But that's not what separates the channels getting millions of search views from everyone else. The real difference is all about what goes into step two, the ranking checklist. I want to show you a channel that's arguably the best at this. Over 4 million subscribers, [music] over 8 million monthly views, and millions of those

are coming from Google search. But here's the wild part. When they publish a new video, it only gets a few thousand views in the first week. That's because this channel isn't built on virality, it's built around search. And nearly [music] every video follows the ranking checklist. Their titles contain the exact keyword people are searching for. Just look at their most popular videos. How to watch movies for free. How to get Microsoft Office for free. Excel tutorial

for beginners. Nothing clever, just exactly what people type into Google and YouTube. And that's the point. Their descriptions are actually summaries of what the video covers, and the target keyword is right [music] there in the first couple of lines. This matters because Google and YouTube often pull those lines directly into their search results. >> [music] >> So, your description isn't just for an algorithm, it's your pitch to anyone who scrolls past your video. They add timestamps

to every video, which YouTube turns into chapters. And those chapters can show up in Google for very specific queries, giving your video more visibility for free. Literally, 2 minutes of work for potentially thousands of passive views. Now, those are the fundamentals, and most people stop there. But the channels pulling millions of views from search do two more things that make all the difference. First, they make the title and thumbnail work as a team. The easiest framework

you can follow is to let the title handle the keyword, and let the thumbnail sell the click. They should complement each other, not repeat each other. For example, if your title says, "Open Cloud tutorial for beginners," your thumbnail doesn't need to say that, too. In Kevin's thumbnail, the text says, "Painless setup," because the setup is kind of painful. The title tells you what the video is, and the thumbnail tells you why you should watch it. This

matters for rankings because CTR is a ranking factor. [music] And even if it wasn't, if nobody clicks your videos, no one's going to watch it. >> [music] >> Second, and this is the one most people completely ignore, they actually say their target keyword and related terms in their video. [music] And this comes straight from the horse's mouth. Google's VP of Search, Liz Reid, said that Google can understand audio content and video content at a level we

couldn't years [music] ago. Meaning, they don't just read the transcript, they understand what the video is actually about. YouTube is literally listening to what you say and watching what you show. So, if your video is about how to create pivot tables, say, "I'm going to show you how to create pivot tables." [music] Talk about rows, columns, filters, calculated fields. Everything someone needs to know to actually create one, and show those things on the screen as you

talk about them. This isn't about keyword stuffing, it's just about [music] being thorough. And thoroughness is exactly what people and search engines want [music] for these types of queries. Now, one more thing before we move on. Before you even start scripting, search your target keyword on YouTube and Google. Look at what's already ranking. If the top results are all step-by-step tutorials, make a step-by-step tutorial. If they're all listicals, make a listical. Don't reinvent the format because

YouTube and Google know what people want when they search a query. >> [music] >> Now, if you do these first two steps right, you can build a channel that gets consistent search traffic for years. But there's a third step that could be the single biggest opportunity on YouTube right now, because search isn't just Google and YouTube anymore, it's AI, the new search, which is changing everything. Search has changed. More people are using AI tools to get

answers to their questions. And even in traditional search, features like Google's AI overviews are taking clicks away from regular organic results. Now, while most websites are getting hurt by the shift, [music] YouTube is actually benefiting. According to our data, YouTube is the most cited domain in Google's AI overviews, and it's near the top for pretty much every other AI tool, too. Some creators are already seeing massive results from this, and most of them don't even realize

why. Take Athlean-X, a fitness channel that's fully capitalizing on the new generation of search. According to Ahrefs Brand Radar, their videos are appearing for over 6,000 fitness-related queries just in Google AI overviews, and over 15,000 in AI mode. And these queries add up to millions of searches happening every single month. So, if you're not thinking about AI search for your YouTube videos, you're leaving free views on the table. And as AI search continues to grow, that

gap is only going to get bigger. So, how do you find topics to optimize for AI search? Just enter a popular brand or YouTube channel into Brand Radar, and go to the topics report. Then set a filter where the domain mentioned is youtube.com. Now, you can see exactly which queries AI is pulling YouTube videos into, so go and create content around those topics. And as for how to actually rank there, it comes back to what we

already covered. Pick the right keyword, make a thorough, well-optimized video, and be comprehensive without wasting people's time. Now, YouTube SEO traffic isn't exactly as exhilarating as going viral. There's no overnight explosion of views. There's no dopamine rush from watching your numbers spike. But it creates a different kind of excitement. The kind where you know that every view is a high-intent, free, passive, [music] and consistent view that won't fade over time. So, go and do it, and

I'll see you in the next one.

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