AI Summary
The speaker advises aspiring Twitch streamers to focus on creating clips, be authentic even with zero viewers, and stream consistently. He shares his ability to spot talent and names three streamers he would invest in: Faxity, Yousef, and Sketch, emphasizing hunger and work ethic as key qualities.
Chapters
Focus on clips. It's hard but doable. Stream for 2-4 hours, be yourself, and fake it till you make it even with zero viewers.
The speaker claims to have a good eye for talent, citing examples of Aiden Ross and Jason who grew after his predictions.
Hunger and consistency are the main qualities that make a streamer stand out. The speaker values truth-telling over ego.
Faxity (Fortnite, grew from 500 to 5-10k viewers), Yousef (IRL streamer, averaging 2k, poised to skyrocket), and Sketch (hilarious but inconsistent, could reach new peak).
The speaker helps streamers by hosting them (e.g., Faxity) and values friendships over financial returns. It's a long-term business strategy as viewers transition.
The speaker believes that genuine support and friendship are more valuable than monetary investment in helping streamers grow, and that consistency and hunger are the true drivers of success.
Clickbait Check
85% Legit"Title promises growth advice and delivers specific strategies and investment picks, though it's more conversational than a step-by-step guide."
Study Flashcards (5)
What is the main advice for growing on Twitch?
easy
Click to reveal answer
What is the main advice for growing on Twitch?
Focus on creating clips and be yourself even with zero viewers.
What quality does the speaker say is most important for a streamer?
easy
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What quality does the speaker say is most important for a streamer?
Hunger and consistency.
03:13
Name the three streamers the speaker would invest in.
medium
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Name the three streamers the speaker would invest in.
Faxity, Yousef, and Sketch.
04:07
How does the speaker invest in streamers without expecting money?
medium
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How does the speaker invest in streamers without expecting money?
By hosting them with his large viewership and building friendships.
06:27
What does the speaker say about luck in streaming?
hard
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What does the speaker say about luck in streaming?
Luck matters to an extent, but you won't get lucky without doing anything.
03:55
π‘ Key Takeaways
Clips are key for growth
Direct actionable advice for aspiring streamers.
Hunger as a predictor of success
Identifies a core trait that separates successful streamers.
03:13Investment picks: Faxity, Yousef, Sketch
Specific names with reasoning, useful for viewers interested in streaming talent.
04:07Investing through friendship, not money
Alternative model for supporting creators without financial transactions.
06:27Full Transcript
[00:00] is the main thing if someone wants to grow on Twitch, they should be doing? Uh, if you want to grow on Twitch, I honestly think you should. It's clips. It's probably the hardest. I mean, I wouldn't say it's the hardest ever is
[00:18] cuz there isn't there is never the hardest time ever, right? Like on always going to be the same hard, right? Pause. But it's going to be like it's
[00:30] to become a YouTuber. There's never a right time. But like right now it's just hard in a way where it's like bro like >> if you start your stream on Twitch like there's so many creators that are big now and like people hop on the bandwagon
[00:47] of like oh if you don't have a a certain amount of viewers why would I watch you? of your time streaming on Twitch. Instead, you should be trying to find a stream on Twitch like 4 hours pri or like 3 hours, maybe even two, and not
[01:04] farm clips, but be myself. Whatever whatever I want to do, whatever type of content, even if you have zero viewers, you have to fake it till you make it. Like pretend that you have an audience watching you and still create the
[01:16] streaming every day because when people start seeing your clips, even if you have five people see your clip, one of them might be like, "Oh, like this guy's when he's reacting to it, right, that guy might become a loyal viewer. You
[01:32] you keep doing it. It's like compounding, you know? It's like >> you just got to The biggest problem is people don't do it. You just got to do it. So, if you could buy stock in three streamers right now, who would you
[01:45] what's crazy? I'm very good at this. Like, very, very good at this. Like, see, I People are going to be like, "Cap in the comments." Bro, when I was
[01:59] watching Aiden Ross, I have text messages with him, DMs, when he was 5,000 to 10,000, which is, by the way, some people are like, "Oh, yeah, he was like, "Yo, you're going to get to this level where you're averaging like
[02:14] 50 to 100,000." We used to have talks about it. He'll even say it himself. Like I used to text him about it and he he became one of the biggest at the time. And then same thing with uh my friend Jason. Shout out to Jason. Um he
[02:29] he was averaging like one to 2,000 viewers, peing around like four. And I just say it just to say like when I say it like I only say it to a select few. this, you're going to do that." Sure enough, he's like that to right now. Um,
[02:46] just left. Um, he was averaging around the same like this reasons, etc." And sure enough, he is like people know him for those
[02:59] reasons. And I I don't know. I just feel like I have a good eye for talent. And I certain level. But what qualities do you see in them that makes them stand out? >> Um, just like hunger to be honest with you, you could tell when someone wants
[03:13] could tell when someone is about it, when they want to become a streamer, cuz live every single day during the certain amount that I did. I'm like, "Okay,
[03:26] make it." And it's not an ego and it's not me being a dick. It's just me of is like being told the truth. So it's like when people are like like I've had like why why would you be coming up to me saying you want you you'd be
[03:41] do. It's like it's the same I did when I wanted to become a YouTuber. I didn't You know it's like it's all luck at the end of the day to an extent but it's
[03:55] doing anything. Like you're not going to get lucky sitting in your bedroom doing would you invest in? >> Um, if I had three streamers that I
[04:07] would invest in, it's actually I've got one that maybe people are like, he Faxity, he's a Fortnite streamer right now. He used to average around like 500
[04:19] to a,000 viewers. And funny enough, I told him, we used to have dinners, and I told him, I was like, "Bro, one day you're going to average this many viewers if you just stick to it." And he he stuck to it. He'll he'll fully admit
[04:31] streamed um where he like thanked me for believing in me literally yesterday. It's it's so random. I just thought about that. Um but I think this dude averages like 5 to 10,000 now. Um but I think if he did IRL content and he
[04:49] as big as me. Not in an ego way, just like to the point where he can do um this dude named Yousef. Um he's a streamer. He like IRLs a lot. He average
[05:04] around like 2,000 viewers. I think once Yousef thing. Like he just has that one moment, I think his career is going to skyrocket cuz he has the drive and he has the work ethic and I think he's going to get the
[05:18] credit he deserves soon. Um and then one that already made it, but I know a lot seriously when it comes to content. I think Sketch I think Sketch can get to a
[05:30] new peak. Um I think that kid is hilarious and I know people are gonna be he also doesn't stream as much. He doesn't post on YouTube as much and he's not consistent with his content. He's more or less like a househeld name, but
[05:45] It's like I think if he took it seriously and he really wanted to, he could become way bigger than he is right now. And I I think Yeah. look forward to it. >> Like he streams and he does YouTube, but
[06:00] he doesn't do it as consistently as he should. And it could be because he's I I truly think he could reach a new level. Why don't you go and invest or
[06:13] help the smaller streamers and like maybe work out a split and say, "Hey, I'll help you get to like 10,000 viewers and we could split, you know, come up with like a revenue share and we'll grow together." Kind of like what FaZe is
[06:27] >> Kind of what like FaZe's whole thing. Let's bring you up with us. >> I'll I'll break that down too. Um, I kind of do it in a way where Jesus I don't really expect much in return. And it's kind of because there's different
[06:42] money. I can invest in someone by helping my helping their viewership by bringing my viewership to them. Maybe tell them to go over and then maybe in money. The way I do it is when I truly believe in someone, a great example is
[06:59] host him all the time with like eight to 20,000 viewers and I just I I just host hilarious. And this isn't an ego. He admitted this. I pull up the clip
[07:14] always believed in me. Like it helped me a lot. Like I'll always love him." It's like that that I I find is better than money. Like I wouldn't I don't want money in return. I want to just see my brain like realize that like okay like I
[07:29] helped someone who actually is grateful for being helped and isn't a dick about it. Did I make him? No. But like did I help him? Yeah. It's something he also in the long run it's like and if you want to think in a business way if I
[07:48] too. So it's like his viewers are going to want to talk to me. his viewers are way. You know what I'm saying? Like it's obviously all transitional at the end of
[08:01] the day. That's how the internet is. But like the way I invest into people is like friendships. Like I I I value my friendships with a lot of people. And I'd like to consider Faxi like one of my good friends.