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7/21/2025, 5:07:47 AM
>>102448836
This is a bizarre question because it reads like somebody who has never watched a youtube video in their life. There is no market for "vods" there's a market for content. A vod is just a vehicle for content. The only reason to watch a vod of a stream is if something happened on the stream worth watching. Nobody is scanning youtube for a 4hour vod of who knows what meandering stream background noise. They are scanning youtube for videos of actual content which may have been produced on stream. The best approach is to format your streams to be easily trimmed down into edited videos.
Use pic related to mark off the parts of your stream where you transition between doing things. Does your stream start with a monologue or welcoming viewers to stream or whatever? Mark where that ends. Nobody on youtube gives a shit about that. I'm going to assume you run ad breaks and stop stream during them because not everyone is going to be subbed and your non subs miss out on a lot if you don't stop. Mark those breaks with markers so you can cut them out. A decent example is card games. Each match you play, place a marker. When you edit later. You now have markers for each of your games. Played 15 games and only 5 of them were interesting? Keep those 5, edit them into a sequence. Do a short intro about what your deck is and does and why you play the cards you do. Slap a thumbnail about which deck you're playing and boom. Free youtube content. You can do this with anything as long as you learn to compartmentalize your content and use streams as a vehicle for it. Otherwise you'll end up in meandering letsplay hell and even you'll get bored watching your own vods.
This is a bizarre question because it reads like somebody who has never watched a youtube video in their life. There is no market for "vods" there's a market for content. A vod is just a vehicle for content. The only reason to watch a vod of a stream is if something happened on the stream worth watching. Nobody is scanning youtube for a 4hour vod of who knows what meandering stream background noise. They are scanning youtube for videos of actual content which may have been produced on stream. The best approach is to format your streams to be easily trimmed down into edited videos.
Use pic related to mark off the parts of your stream where you transition between doing things. Does your stream start with a monologue or welcoming viewers to stream or whatever? Mark where that ends. Nobody on youtube gives a shit about that. I'm going to assume you run ad breaks and stop stream during them because not everyone is going to be subbed and your non subs miss out on a lot if you don't stop. Mark those breaks with markers so you can cut them out. A decent example is card games. Each match you play, place a marker. When you edit later. You now have markers for each of your games. Played 15 games and only 5 of them were interesting? Keep those 5, edit them into a sequence. Do a short intro about what your deck is and does and why you play the cards you do. Slap a thumbnail about which deck you're playing and boom. Free youtube content. You can do this with anything as long as you learn to compartmentalize your content and use streams as a vehicle for it. Otherwise you'll end up in meandering letsplay hell and even you'll get bored watching your own vods.
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