People watch over a billion hours of video a day on YouTube. That's over 100,000 years' worth of video watched every single day.
That's insane!
So how do you make sure that your video marketing content gets a share of that watch time? By making sure it's optimized for YouTube and Google search. Yea, that's right, videos are playing a bigger part in Google search as well.
But the old methods of video SEO don't work anymore.
Just like Google, which owns YouTube by the way, YouTube is paying less attention to exact keywords and more attention to topics, context, and user intent. So, if you want to your videos to be successful in search in 2018 and beyond, here are the things you should be paying attention to:
Your title has a huge affect on your video SEO, but not in the way you might expect. According to Backlinko, including an exact match of your target keyword in your title does have a slight affect on video rank, but that correlation is relatively small.
What's more important is that your title drives a high click-through rate (CTR). In order to do that, it needs to be compelling to your audience. If you struggle writing compelling titles, try some of these methods:
In your quest to get more clicks, it can be easy to fall into the clickbait trap. But this is important, DON'T CREATE CLICKBAIT TITLES! According to YouTube itself, your YouTube ranking will be seriously hurt if your titles or thumbnails are:
Your video thumbnails matter for the same reason that your titles do - they should be compelling and cause users to want to click on them more than other videos. Just remember that the list of rules in the titles section above applies to thumbnails as well.
Spend some time creating a custom thumbnail that's visually appealing, speaks to what your video will cover, and catches people's attention. The image to the right shows the top three thumbnails for the YouTube search, "YouTube SEO Tips."
There is one exception to this - if your video includes someone famous or some awesome action shots, you can and should just use an image from the video. That image will be compelling, simple, and authentic - a winning combination.
Contrary to what you may have heard, keywords no longer matter in your YouTube descriptions. In fact, in that same Backlinko study, they found zero correlation between keyword-optimized descriptions and rankings for that term.
So why do descriptions still matter? For two reasons.
First, the first 125 characters of your description appears in the search results. If you can grab people's attention with the beginning of your description, your CTR will improve.
Second, while YouTube might not care about exact keyword-matching in descriptions, they are likely still using the description to learn about the context of the video. Make sure you're writing a long (200+ words) and accurate description to provide as much context as possible.
If you've ever taken a look at the automatic transcripts YouTube creates for your videos, you can tell that they aren't very good yet at accurately being able to tell what your video is about just from that video's audio.
You need to help them out by uploading an accurate transcript of your video. And, in case it wasn't obvious, your video should be about the keyword you're optimizing for - so your transcript should include that keyword and related terms as well. Just make sure it's an accurate transcript and that you aren't just repeating your keyword over and over. Speechpad, along with other transcription tools, can help you streamline this process.
YouTube cares A LOT about keeping people on their platform. Help them do that, and they'll reward you with high rankings.
There's two things you need to do to keep people watching.
First, you need to keep them watching your video. The more time someone spends watching your video, the better. Here's how:
Second, you need to get them to watch another video after they watched your first one. It makes sense, the more time someone spends on the YouTube platform, the more ads they see, and the more money YouTube makes. Here's a few ways to keep people watching (the first two tips are straight from YouTube):
This one is pretty obvious, if people are watching, liking, sharing, and commenting on your video and subscribing to your channel, YouTube and Google are going to give them priority.
There are a lot of tactics to get people to engage, but there are two that are guaranteed to work every time. They're easy in theory but take quite a bit of work in practice.
Want more ideas to get the maximum number of shares for your videos? Check out our post on the science behind viral video content!
In 2018 and beyond, things like content quality and video engagement will be far more important than simply including keywords in your video description. If you haven't already, put all of your effort into getting people to click on, keep watching, and engage with your videos and you'll be set.
Have you had luck with other ways of getting your videos to rank? Let us know in the comments below!