?? The YouTube Algorithm For Real Estate Demystified:
Andrew Bayon
Building real estate brands, sharing stories & empowering leaders of tomorrow ??? host of “Breaking and Building Leaders”
Here's the September content calendar with 14+ resources, AI prompts and the ultimate YouTube dashboard template (and way more)
This is a new style I plan on doing with the case study breakdowns because those take some time with the research and thoughtfulness.
So for today let’s talk about what I’m learning, seeing, and experiencing from:
Also below, you’ll find the copy & steal template for a September Content Calendar for real estate.
I hope you enjoy this one!
— Andrew
?? The YouTube Algorithm for Real Estate Explained:
The biggest mistake we all make is assuming platforms are based on some white-and-black algorithm.
But the truth, explained by a YouTube employee, is that the algorithm is actually based on people.
Algorithm = people.
So if the algorithm is based on people, then we only need to focus on what they care about, aka culture.
Put yourself in the mind and shoes of the viewer and create what they care about not what you or I care about.
This is where the conversation often turns to the “YouTube meta.”
Meta = the most effective tactics available (to achieve the goal of the game).
Which is just a fancy word for what’s working vs. not currently, aka culture.
So the YouTube meta is the most effective way to win on YouTube.
While the algorithm can favor particular content because of supply & demand, and consumer behavior, humans are the focus.
But if the algorithm is people and people are all different, then if you base your logic on first principles then this tells there are multiple styles that will work.
Different people = different preferences.
So there’s a dance between the relationships of:
What do you want to make?
What does your audience want to watch?
And what do the platforms want?
And you can overvalue any of those 3 factors.
Case and point, the current YouTube meta in real estate.
In real estate, many people tend to only stick to videos about:
Living in {INSERT CITY}
Moving to {INSERT CITY}
But that’s not the only thing that gets real results (aka buyers & sellers).
Education videos only reach 29.8% (GWI + Hootsuite) of users on YouTube. So if that’s your only method you’ll limit your reach.
And even the talking head (direct to camera) format isn’t the only way to create content, there’s multiple different styles:
Vlogs
Interviews
Cinematic storytelling
And then there’s multiple different angles within different styles like talking head direct to camera, live, and screen sharing.
Talking head is just the easiest & most duplicatable YouTube format.
But then you see the best like Ken Pozek who’s engaging his audience with different styles like on-the-street interviews with Orlando residents.
Let’s take a step back for a second…
Why does YouTube matter??
694,000 hours of videos streamed on YouTube every minute vs. only 452,000 hours of video Netflix… (Wyzowl)
#2 most visited website on the internet (GWI / Hootsuite)
With an average 23.7 hours per month per user (GWI / Hootsuite)
And if connection & trust is built over (volume of) time then there’s no better platform for building social equity currently.
This is why entrepreneurs like Ryan Pineda vividly describes the difference between when someone finds him on TikTok or Instagram vs. YouTube &
And why business owners like Mr. Beast can build a $1,000,000,000 company or Ken Pozek (team leader in Orlando) in real estate can generate well over $3,000,000 in commission solely & directly from YouTube.
Every business needs a discovery platform to get found by potential clients:
Discovery vs. Relationship platforms:
Distribution on Discovery Platforms is owned by the platform itself – you're just borrowing it.
Remember what I said about social media being rented land? That's true – but that doesn't mean that it doesn't offer value or opportunity.
Relationship Platforms
Relationship Platforms are focused on distribution that YOU own and control. Some people will say relationship platforms allow you to "own your audience" but that's not the right way to think about it.
Your "audience" is actually a collection of individuals – and you don't own individuals. You own the right to communicate with them (for as long as they allow you to).
- CreatorScience
SEO (ranking on search)
Reviews
Blogging
YouTube
TikTok
Podcasting
PR
etc.
Then a relationship platform and conversion model, but more on those later…
So back to the algorithm, aka the people.
What matters most on YouTube?
The first thing to focus on is the packaging. Packaging is the gift wrapping of a present (the content/video). Or like the front cover, branding, and title of a book.
For YouTube, this is:
Idea ???
Title ???
Thumbnail ???
And the idea is arguably the most important because everything else just trickles down from the idea.
?? So how do you pick a great idea?
Here’s a few questions you can ask yourself:
Is the idea interesting to you?
Is it deeply interesting for your audience?
Does it evoke an emotional response? Or can it be emotionally evoking through packaging and presentation?
Does it open multiple curiosity gaps? Does it make you want or NEED to watch it?
How do you find great ideas? Research ??:
? So here’s an idea criteria checklist to help you know which ones to execute on (from a consultant on Mr. Beast’s team, and other big names like him):
领英推荐
?? ChatGPT, Bard, Claude AI prompt examples:
?? Here’s some of what’s working in real estate:
The second part of the packaging is the Title.
?? So, what makes a great title?
The 3 questions every reader asks when reading any piece of content are:
Next dial in the specifics and curiosity.
These are the 5 components we want you to focus on to bring absolute clarity in your headline:
This is another way for you to increase the voltage or attractiveness of your headlines.
Look at your audience and outcome in your headline and ask yourself the following questions:
Then punch up or down the voltage by asking:
Then leveraging using power words for example:
There’s different proven formulas you can use for headlines as well.
? Here’s a title checklist:
?? If there’s anything you take away for the title & thumbnail, remember these 3 key questions:
?? ChatGPT, Bard, Claude AI prompt examples:
?? Here’s some of what’s working in real estate:
??? Last on the list is the thumbnail.
And this is arguably one of the most important pieces.
This took me a while to really learn… 90% of the thumbnail is psychology. Only 10% is the design.
The thumbnail must be clean, obvious, and easy to understand with a glance, but think of the thumbnail more like an ad, not the title.
People will see the thumbnail before they read the title.
?? This is why these 3 factors help you get more attention and more clicks to watch your video:
And we want the viewer to be so curious they need to read the title and want to click to learn more.
Here’s the main components with thumbnails:
When it comes to faces & people on a thumbnail there’s 101 different options, and combinations, so here’s some battle-tested variations:
And if you shoot them in a few different clothes you can stretch them out a couple of months.
?? What’s working in real estate?
Now that you know how to package a video with a:
?? How do you gauge success?
There’s on-platform feedback such as:
And then there’s off-platform feedback:
It’s common that people will never like or subscribe but then say “I’ve been watching your videos…”
As a business owner at the end of the day, your focus is driving business results, not being a creator.
This is something Ali Abdaal (4-5 million subscribers) talks about often too.
He doesn’t focus on views, subscribers, and even click-through rate & retention. He focuses on long term, is it driving the business?
Granted, he has a team focusing on CTR and AVD, but his message still stands.
You don’t need a big channel with tens of thousands of subscribers and hundreds of thousands of views on your videos to get business from your channel.
We’re finding success with getting buyers & sellers organically reach out from $300,000 to $5,000,000+
Consistently getting 3-30 leads on every video when you leverage lead gen CTAs (calls to action)
Small channels with a few hundred or thousand subscribers can bring you $5,000,000 or $20,000,000+ in sales in real estate.
In real estate, unlike other industries, you only need 1 buyer buying a $500,000 or $1,000,000 house, to cash in a $10,000+ or $20,000+ check.
And when you get multiple buyers a year then the YouTube channel can pay for itself.
Other industries have to sell way more to make the same or less money.
They need YouTube’s monetization, ad money, affiliate links, and all of these other revenue sources.
So it’s better to focus on “is the channel bringing in business?” and the best way to audit that is:
But like Ali Abdaal, real estate can focus less on metrics like CTR, AVD, comments, likes & subscribers if the videos are driving business results.
Now, having better metrics can help drive more, so that doesn’t mean you can just 100% neglect them.
?? This means you have more flexibility and don’t need to focus on being perfect and being a creator.
Hopefully, this deep dive helps you with the first two, output & views (CTR).
I’ll touch more in a part 2 & probably part 3 about retention/presentation (AVD), and also leads per video, and clients in a later edition.
As well as dive into relationship platforms.
So stay tuned for more deep dives like this!
?? [Copy & Steal Template] - September Content Calendar:
Inside, you’ll find these resources: