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earn money from youtube by uploading videos


How can I make money?
1. Earn from PTC sites
If you are trying to earn money online & need only small extra income less than $200 (Rs.12,000) then PTC sites are the best way to start.
Here you can make money by completing small surveys which takes 5 minutes to 30 minutes depending on the requirement of a particular company.



How are you tubers paid?
How can you make money by posting videos on YouTube?
Advertisers only pay when someone clicks an ad or watches for 30 seconds. This is why you can't tie your channel views to dollars. If your video gets ten million views but nobody watches or click the ads, you don't make any money. This is how I'm able to make $1 per 25 views.



How are you tubers paid?
Once the YouTuber links Google AdSense to their channel, they make 68% of the ad revenue (see Google AdSense Revenue Share). YouTube charges advertisers when a viewer watches 30 seconds or more of the ad, and typically charges around $.18 per view (see How Much Do Ads on YouTube Cost).




1. Create engaging content
Make videos that people find very interesting and/or entertaining. You can measure this in YouTube Analytics if you look at the "audience retention" screen .This screen shows how long people watch your videos on average. This number should be at least around 40 to 50%. If it's (much) lower, try improving your content or your presentation, or consider making your videos shorter. It's much harder to keep your audience interested for 30 minutes than for 3 minutes.
Audience retention is very important on YouTube, because videos with high audience retention get better rankings in search results and suggested videos. Of course, use great titles, descriptions, tags and thumbnails to make your videos inviting for people who stumble over them.

2. Aim for user interaction
The best way to share your videos is to let other people share them. If people vote thumbs up, or if they leave a comment, the video is often automatically shared in their feed (and sometimes on their social media as well). It's okay to just ask for a thumbs up in an annotation or text on your video, as long as you don't shove it in people's face. You could make a joke about it, like: "Vote thumbs up if you agree that this bunny is cute! ;-)"
You can inspire people to comment by asking interesting questions. Like: "What are your best and worst experiences in high school?" or "How do you feel about this latest YouTube redesign?" Of course, the questions need to be relevant to the topic in the video, but that goes without saying.

3. Be an active YouTuber
In my opinion, 50% of the work on YouTube is about making videos. The other 50% is about being an active YouTuber. Be sure to subscribe to other YouTubers and leave likes and comments on other people's videos. Here's the trick: don't just subscribe to the big channels like RWJ and Smosh, but subscribe to smaller channels as well. They will still notice nice comments and respond to them, which is good. As a rule of thumb you should aim for channels who are slightly above your subscriber-level. So if you have 30 subscribers yourself, try to find interesting channels with 50 to 100 subscribers. I've made a tool called The YouTube ChannelCrawlerthat makes it easy to find channels that meet your criteria.
Just another little tip: be sure to show your subscriptions in the "About"-section of your channel. Most people make this private, but I think it's much better to make it public? Why? Because if you do, people that you subscribe to will receive an e-mail. And this often inspires them to click on your channel as well.

Keep in mind: every comment you write is a direct link to your channel. Every investment you make in relationships with other channels will pay off at a later time. You need other YouTubers to get anywhere, as much as other YouTubers need you. YouTube is about interaction, not just about uploading videos.



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