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Gabe
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Gabe
@GabrielCheongH
Done-for-you YouTube content (ROI guaranteed) | Helping coaches, consultants & agencies get consistent inbound leads using YouTube
Generate Quality Leads DFY ➡️ Katılım Temmuz 2023
74 Takip Edilen233 Takipçiler

Be Elon.
> Choose the hardest business on Earth: rockets
> Start SpaceX
> Join Tesla as a startup, take control, push out founders
> Run both companies to the edge in 2008
> Survive by one successful rocket launch that wins a ~$1.6B NASA contract
> Figure out how to make rockets reusable
> Launch a car into space. Because you can
> Turn EVs from a joke into the world’s most valuable car company
> Buy Twitter for $44B. Save free speech on the internet
> Fire most people
> Rename it after the company you lost 25 years ago
> Start an AI company to race the one you helped create
> Run six companies. CEO of four at the same time
> Decide saving humanity is a systems problem
> And treat it like it’s your full-time job

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Your YouTube ideation strategy doesn't matter if you skipped the most important step
And 90% of you did
Everyone obsesses over what videos to make
Then they make content for "ecom brands" when they really only want supplement brands doing 7 figs
Or generic business content when they want owners making 50k/m, not beginners hunting for free value
Define exactly who you serve first
Industry
Revenue level
Business size
Their specific problems
"But that means fewer views"
Yeah, and?
Those 300 views from your actual ICP beat 30,000 random viewers who can't afford you
Build your ICP first
Then research what's proven in that exact niche
Broke down the exact process in a video
Link in comments
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copying YouTube videos is the best way to grow and book calls
but the way you're doing it guarantees you'll fail
i see this constantly
someone finds a competitor crushing it
dumps their transcript into AI
asks it to "make this video for me"
wonders why it flops
here's the problem:
AI can't see the editing can't catch the thumbnail
patterns completely misses the pacing has no clue
what's actually shown on screen doesn't understand
why people keep watching
so you end up with videos that say the same things
but look and feel completely different
and that's why they fail
look at make money online channels:
fast cuts every 2-3 seconds
constant movement
graphics popping up nonstop
keeps younger audiences engaged
now look at finance/retirement content:
minimal editing
long screen shares
slow deliberate pacing
lets complex ideas actually sink in
both work. both make money.
but they look NOTHING alike because they're speaking
to completely different people
stop copying transcripts
start watching the actual videos
multiple times across competitor channels
track what keeps repeating:
intro formats they use every time
what thumbnails actually look like
which editing choices keep THEIR audience watching
"that's gonna take forever"
yeah that's why you're losing
the goal isn't copying everything exactly
you're looking for what makes it work
then adapting that for whoever you're trying to reach
your competitors are winning because they understand their audience
you're losing because you're too lazy to do the actual research
stop asking AI to do your homework
actually watch the damn videos
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most people think youtube success = expensive cameras + fancy editing
WRONG
creators with $10k setups book zero calls
while someone explaining their process in a google doc books 5 calls a week
the difference?
one has real stories and proof, the other has good lighting
you can't wrap a turd in nice packaging and expect people to buy
prospects smell bullshit instantly
- cinematic b-roll
- color grading
- motion graphics
- 5 camera angles
none of that matters if you're saying generic stuff everyone else says
no one's booking a call with you
but explain something through:
- a specific story you lived
- a mistake you actually made
- a client result you personally generated
people book calls even if you're recording in your bedroom in your moms basement
because experiences build TRUST and trust books calls
you can hire an editor for $500, buy a camera for $2k
but you can't buy 8 months of scaling a client from 5k to 27k subs
THAT'S the proof prospects need to pull out their credit card
so stop worrying about production quality and start worrying about having actual stories
that make people think
"this guy knows what he's doing"
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I hate recording content
Always have
The idea of being "on" every single day, turning on the camera, hoping I sound good, praying the lighting works... it drains me
But I still can film 4+ videos a month in under 4 hours total if I want
Most people burn out because they treat content like a daily obligation
They wake up, turn on the camera, wing a video, and hope it performs
Then they do it again tomorrow
And the next day
And the day after that
It's exhausting and ineffective
Because when you're constantly in creation mode, you never give yourself time to think strategically about what you're actually making
You're just reacting, scrambling, and hoping something sticks
I did this for months when I first started, and it nearly killed my motivation entirely.
Then something clicked for me
The best business owners don't record more often, they're just smarter in executing it
They separate the creative process from the execution process, and that one shift changed everything for me
So now I use a system that lets me batch-record a month of content in one sitting.
I dedicate 2–7 days to pure planning
I sit down and map out every video idea, script the hooks, outline the key points, and organize everything into a clear shooting order
A well-planned video doesn't take long to to record, because your already walking in with a plan
A poorly planned one takes an hour of messing up and stumbling and still underperforms
Then I block one 4-hour window to film everything
I pick a day, clear my calendar, set up my space once, and knock out every single video back to back
I've already done the thinking, so when I hit record I'm just following the plan I already made
After that session, I send everything to my editor and move on
I don't even think about recording again for weeks
That means I'm not forcing myself to feel inspired every single morning or stressing about what to film today
I get it all done in one push and buy myself a month of freedom
And honestly, that's the biggest win for me
Because once the content is done, I can focus on the parts of my business that actually move the needle instead of constantly worrying what to post next week
What about you?
Have you tried batch recording before, or are you still grinding it out day by day?

English

I went for a walk today and had this random thought
If it wasn't for YouTube, I genuinely wouldn't be where I am
And I don't mean the entertainment side of it
I mean the actual skills I picked up over the years
Every time I got stuck on something, whether it was a math problem back in school or trying to figure out how to edit videos or position an offer
I'd pull up YouTube and someone would teach me
And over time, all of those little lessons stacked up
They shaped how I think, what I can do, and honestly who I became
That's when it clicked for me
People don't just book calls because you have a good offer
They book calls because they already trust you
And that trust gets built way before they ever see your calendar link
When someone teaches you something that actually works, you remember them
You start trusting their judgment
So when they mention they have a service, it doesn't feel like a pitch anymore
It just feels like the next logical step.
That's the real power behind educational content

English

If you want people to buy from your YouTube videos
You make videos that target the exact traits of the buyer
If you want views, just target everyone, but you only attract broke people
There is a reason why almost everyone in the education space make way more money using YouTube
Then the education space
Yet the entertainment space gets wayyyyy more views then the education space
English

Why do channels with 500 views make more money than channels with 500K?
I spent 2 years figuring this out
Most YouTube coaches will tell you to chase views, and it's the main thing that's holding you back
Look, the channels making the most money aren't the ones going viral
Iman Gadzhi and Jordan Welch both have 1M sub YouTube Channels
But they both run second YouTube channels that get 1-5k views per video
Yet, they generate most of their revenue from those channels then their main ones
But why would they do that when they could just make more videos on their main channel?
Because their main channels went viral by targeting one of the most broad markets on YouTube: make money online and self improvement
Those viewers just want entertainment, or generic advice
They don't buy expensive stuff
The breakthrough came when I realized how the algorithm actually works
YouTube pushes your video to people most likely to watch it all the way through
So when you make content for a specific audience (like business owners making $50K/month)
YouTube literally sends it to those exact people
Every viewer on those second channels is a potential client
So, what you should really focus on is your competitive edge
Look at other creators in your space, figure out what they're doing, then find where you can stand out
Maybe it's better thumbnails
Maybe you've been in the industry longer so you can go deeper, or maybe you just solve problems nobody else is addressing
At the end of the day, solving real problems with valuable information beats high production every time

English

louis vuitton PRINTS $91B/year by making brokies feel like shit until they bought
here’s how they became the most luxurious brand in the world:
THE PSYOP:
luxury isn’t what you think it is:
"superior craftsmanship"
"high quality products"
"timeless elegance"
that’s so fucking wrong
and louis vuitton knew it
luxury is manufactured exclusivity + status anxiety
chinese factories produce the quality
but their cost is 10x less
then you increase the price at 500% markup
and apply the louis vitton strategies:
lesson 1: the logo game
LV monogram gets plastered everywhere
looks like shit
but people buy
hermes (their main competitor) doesn't do this
their logo is subtle
clean + elegant
LV does the opposite:
logo MUST be seen by everyone
customers don't buy bags
they buy social proof
"everyone sees i have louis vuitton"
"everyone knows i'm rich"
"i’m a baller"
reality: they sold a kidney or some shit
only brokies get impressed by LV
REAL wealth flexes hermes (subtly)
but there’s money in the broke
lesson in there
lesson 2: the HUGE markup
LV bag costs:
- materials: $50
- labor: $100
- total: $150
sells for: $2,500
+1,566% markup
"but the quality is worth it!"
no
$400 gets you the same quality
$2,000+ for a logo is diabolical
all to feel exclusive and rich
when you’re actually broke as shit
lesson 3: tiered access
LV has multiple levels to make you feel poor:
tier 1: canvas monogram bags
entry level
"anyone" can buy
tier 2: leather bags
higher price
"serious" buyers
tier 3: exotic skins
very high price
"collectors only"
tier 4: special orders
invite only
ultra wealthy
higher tier = bigger identity
at first you say:
“yeah i love louis vuitton”
“louis vuitton is high-quality”
to then start glazing that shit
believing they care about you
THEY CARE ABOUT YOUR $$$:
tier 1 buyers feel poor compared to tier 2
tier 2 feel poor compared to tier 3
everyone upgrades to feel better
genius psychological torture
for louis vuitton:
your value = your spending power
lesson 4: fake scarcity
collab drops
limited editions
regional exclusives
all this creates FOMO
"only 500 made worldwide"
people line up overnight
all for a fucking bag
that costs $50 to make
sells them for $5,000
resells for $15,000
greedy bitches
faked status at its finest
lesson 5: the flagship strategy
LV stores are only in premium locations:
champs-élysées paris
5th avenue nyc
rodeo drive
NEVER in:
- outlets (too cheap)
- malls (too common)
- online only (no experience)
location itself = BIG exclusivity signal
you don't just buy louis vuitton
buy it at a LV store in a premium area
part of the flex
lesson 6: the sales associate manipulation
walk into LV store
associates ignore you
unless you look wealthy as fuck
we both know you don’t 🥀
100% intentional
makes you want to prove you belong
"i'll show these snobby fucks"
"i'll buy something expensive"
yeah that’ll show them
keep wasting your money
that’s definitely NOT what they want
lesson 7: the collaboration hype
LV x supreme LV x jeff koons
LV x pharrell LV x fucking everyone
louis vuitton borrows prestige from others
streetwear kids who can't afford LV
suddenly they want LV too
maintains luxury image + market expands
ez way to print big bucks
lesson 8: the heritage storytelling
"founded 1854"
"parisian craftsmanship passed down"
"artisan techniques perfected over centuries"
every single ad mentions history
why?
justifies the insane fucking price:
- "you're not buying a bag"
- "you're buying tradition"
- "you're buying history"
emotional justification for an irrational purchase
one that gets you into debt
lesson 9: the never-discount religion
LV never EVER does:
- promotions
- sales discounts
- promotions black friday deals
literally refusing free money
the reasoning is genius though:
discount = desperation
luxury = scarcity
THE PROBLEM WITH LUXURY BRANDS:
if you discount
it’s not luxury
who wants a fucking bag others won’t ENVY
karl marx failed to understand how great it is to have more than others (lmao)
no one spends $2,000 without reason
what’s also crucial is:
never on sale = holds value
makes $2,500 impulse buy feel rational
when they actually got ripped off
lesson 10: the counterfeit "problem"
LV is the most counterfeited brand globally
they could do something about it
but they intentionally DON’T
counterfeits = free marketing
someone sees a fake LV bag and thinks:
"wow people really want this brand"
people do want it
they just can’t afford it
when they can afford a real one they buy it
counterfeits create aspiration for the brand
lesson 11: influencer selection
LV doesn't pay random influencers
they only give products to:
- cultural elites
- A-list celebrities
- old money families
this way they maintain their ‘aspirational’ image
if every person/influencer has it
then no one else will want it
scarcity in distribution = maintains desire
you won’t see epstein with louis vuitton
maybe the kids on his island but not him
(fuck everyone’s catching strays today lmao)
lesson 12: the resale value manipulation
LV products “hold value” over time
they manufacture less than demand intentionally
scarcity = value
strong resale market justifies the high price:
- "i can sell it later for 80% of what i paid"
- "i'm not spending i'm investing"
- "it's basically an investment"
makes $2,500 feel financially responsible lmao
by selling less they’re making MORE
lesson 13: the consumer experience design
LV stores designed:
champagne offered immediately
marble floors everywhere
private shopping rooms
perfect lighting setup
personal stylists
only if they know you’re rich though
and for what?
selling bags?
fuck no
selling a FEELING
feeling of:
"i've fucking made it"
"i belong in luxury spaces"
"why does it burn when i piss"
i don’t know about the last one but…
the feeling of success LV gives
it’s why you’re willing to go into debt
for a fucking logo
lesson 14: the logo equity protection
LV periodically updates:
marketing campaigns
packaging design
store layouts
but NEVER changes the actual logo
logo recognition = equity built for decades
change it = lose all that equity instantly
everything else can evolve
but the logo must stay forever
otherwise it won’t be LV anymore
lesson 15: the luxury-tier psychological pricing
bag costs $2,490
not $2,500
even at luxury level they use this trick
it’s because it feels cheaper:
$2,490 = ~$2,400
$2,500 = $2,500
before buying (to themselves):
“damn this costs $2,400”
after buying (to their friends):
“this cost me $2,500”
being rich ≠ psychologically immune
but being poor makes you fall for it more
the results:
revenue:
$91B annually
(that alone is enough lol)
built purely on:
- status anxiety
- heritage storytelling
- never-discount policy
- manufactured scarcity
- visible social signaling
NOT built on:
- real innovation
- customer service
- actual product quality
all to fuck with your head
so that you would buy their shit
the lessons for ecom:
TRUTH:
you can't replicate louis vuitton
they have a century of ‘brand equity’
but you can steal their psychology:
1. resale value positioning
2. experience over product
3. visible branding status
4. tiered product access
5 collaboration strategy
6. never discount policy
7. influencer selectivity
8. heritage storytelling
9. flagship presence
10. artificial scarcity
luxury ≠ quality
luxury = feeling
luxury is making people feel like shit
about themselves + what they lack
special: because they can afford a lower tier
inadequate: because there's a higher tier
LV mastered this psychological torture
that's why they print $91B
and why you’re still broke
bookmark this & lock in
- amin

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@GabrielCheongH Fr like if they don't even click it doesn't matter how good the video is.
English

This is a terrible way of utilizing outlier theory
Blatantly copying someone else's videos title and thumbnail
You should be taking the title and thumbnail, and change it in a way
So it reflects your niche
This is a good opportunity to find gaps in the video and improve them
In your video
If you don't, you will just be considered the guy in second place
rayane 𓃮@EsotericaHQ
Holy creativity
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2025 went by fast
But one thing I learned is that
You can only focus on one main goal to truly
Crush it
I you have many other supplementary goals that sound
"nice to achieve"
NGMI
Example: You can't train like an athlete when your trying to get a business off the ground
You can try to do all these extra goals
But, you are going to be spread too thin
And will result in you achieving mediocre results through the year
So this year
I am going to double down and focus on one thing
Scaling the business, and keep fitness only to the minimum viable amount to stay fit
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There are people dropping 12 hour long free courses on YouTube
Alex Hormozi gives all his info out for free
Charlie Morgan recently made a free Skool that should be the price of a 3k coaching program
Gatekeeping is no longer an option, your best info is probably out there already
Plus AI knowing a lot about everything
So next time your scared to give your best secrets
Think of that
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