I got this video recommended to me, so congrats on cracking the algorithm, but I do have some observations. 1. Your video starts TO THE TEE like every scammer grifter intro on the internet. Which almost made me click off right away. 2. Don't call music "beats" for the love of god. People who make "beats" struggle with making real music because of this simplified concept younger generations have confused with actual music. 3. I'm a beginner too, but Hundreds of collaborations for the most basic ass lo-fi-trap beat? Fake it until you make it? Ok, but don't make it so obvious. 4. Don't promise people timeframes, all this "month 1, month 2, etc" nonsense is useless, it makes your information seem structured, but it only ends up with false expectations from your audience. 5. The road from what you offer in your video to "Full-time music production" is a VERY VERY long path, more false expectations. Making it in an oversaturated market is hard enough as it is. 6. Rest is mostly fine, you do offer some good advice and good tips. 7. Don't waste time telling people how to behave, what to say, how to speak. People are people, you can't make a professional out of a "BUY MY BEATS BRO" doofus. 8. Take your own advice, be genuine, because you sound like a "I asked ChatGPT for the most optimized marketing shill script". I don't mean that as an insult, there's things you have to do to make it on RUclips, but tone it down.
@@oFcAsHeEp Yo, I appreciate the feedback! You took the time to write this out, so I’m going to do the same and respond point by point haha. 1. My goal is to provide as much value as possible upfront, not to come off as a scammer. The intro is meant to hook viewers in. might not be for everyone, but it’s the most efficient way for me. I’ll work on making the intros feel less “salesy” next time;) 2. I’m not downplaying “music” by using the word “beats” lol. This point doesn’t really make sense to me. 3. *Hundreds of dollars in revenue from collab sales, not hundreds of collabs! It was probably around 5-7 producers who used the sample. Beatstars collabs are a big thing actually. I’d suggest looking into it, many producers actually make solid money using this strategy. 4. Like you said, the 90-day thing is there to help the structure. I’m not promising everyone will be full-time in exactly 90 days, it’s more like a goal to work towards if. With great beats and consistency it’s definitely possible. 5. i agree! took me 7 years to go full-time, and I made A LOT of mistakes haha. But that doesn’t mean it can’t happen faster for someone else who avoids those same mistakes 6. Thanks, lol! 7. I think many producers don’t realize that “yo buy my beats” isn’t a good strategy. I had to learn that lesson too because that’s exactly what I was doing in the beginning 8. i get it, structured advice can come across as “too optimized" but my goal is to give practical steps to follow. I built my career this way, and I genuinely want to help others do the same. :)
Been waiting for this 🌹
Did you like it? :)
The closing plan when dm diving is something I still need practice on
@@phoenix-element dm me on ig let‘s see how we can fix it :)
How many samples would be considered a “full” sample pack?
@@flockafan96 i usually put anywhere from 5-7 samples in a pack :)
I got this video recommended to me, so congrats on cracking the algorithm, but I do have some observations.
1. Your video starts TO THE TEE like every scammer grifter intro on the internet. Which almost made me click off right away.
2. Don't call music "beats" for the love of god. People who make "beats" struggle with making real music because of this simplified concept younger generations have confused with actual music.
3. I'm a beginner too, but Hundreds of collaborations for the most basic ass lo-fi-trap beat? Fake it until you make it? Ok, but don't make it so obvious.
4. Don't promise people timeframes, all this "month 1, month 2, etc" nonsense is useless, it makes your information seem structured, but it only ends up with false expectations from your audience.
5. The road from what you offer in your video to "Full-time music production" is a VERY VERY long path, more false expectations. Making it in an oversaturated market is hard enough as it is.
6. Rest is mostly fine, you do offer some good advice and good tips.
7. Don't waste time telling people how to behave, what to say, how to speak. People are people, you can't make a professional out of a "BUY MY BEATS BRO" doofus.
8. Take your own advice, be genuine, because you sound like a "I asked ChatGPT for the most optimized marketing shill script". I don't mean that as an insult, there's things you have to do to make it on RUclips, but tone it down.
@@oFcAsHeEp Yo, I appreciate the feedback! You took the time to write this out, so I’m going to do the same and respond point by point haha.
1. My goal is to provide as much value as possible upfront, not to come off as a scammer. The intro is meant to hook viewers in. might not be for everyone, but it’s the most efficient way for me. I’ll work on making the intros feel less “salesy” next time;)
2. I’m not downplaying “music” by using the word “beats” lol. This point doesn’t really make sense to me.
3. *Hundreds of dollars in revenue from collab sales, not hundreds of collabs! It was probably around 5-7 producers who used the sample. Beatstars collabs are a big thing actually. I’d suggest looking into it, many producers actually make solid money using this strategy.
4. Like you said, the 90-day thing is there to help the structure. I’m not promising everyone will be full-time in exactly 90 days, it’s more like a goal to work towards if. With great beats and consistency it’s definitely possible.
5. i agree! took me 7 years to go full-time, and I made A LOT of mistakes haha. But that doesn’t mean it can’t happen faster for someone else who avoids those same mistakes
6. Thanks, lol!
7. I think many producers don’t realize that “yo buy my beats” isn’t a good strategy. I had to learn that lesson too because that’s exactly what I was doing in the beginning
8. i get it, structured advice can come across as “too optimized" but my goal is to give practical steps to follow. I built my career this way, and I genuinely want to help others do the same. :)
simple a$$ beat
@@SjarMenace yess! i know it‘s hard to realize for most producers but the simple stuff is what gets picked the most :)