
YouTube simply wasnโt on my radar when I started blogging 10 years ago. All the people I liked and followed were bloggers. I didnโt watch YouTube videos to understand how to do something (my dad did, though). Instead, I scoured forums for people in trades and subscribed to bloggers recapping their projects. I preferred tutorials in their written form to digest at my leisure and repeatedly reference. As a result I began my blog by writing to someone just like me, and tried to give them what I came to blogs for (often reading from work, where I didnโt want to get caught watching a video!).
โIโll spend extra time googling and looking around for a written- and picture-documented DIY and despair when I can only find videos.โ
โOlivia, @diyhorseownership

YOU GRAVITATE TOWARD SKILL SETS YOU ALREADY HAVE
I came from a customer service background in software where I did a lot of technical documentation. I simply โgotโ blogging more than I did on-camera work. As my blog became more popular, I went to conferences to network. The classes were focused on traffic, Pinterest, Instagram, and more, but never seemed to focus on YouTube.
PINTEREST HEAVILY INFLUENCED THE BLOGGERโS FOCUS
I hopped on Pinterest very early and it was a huge traffic driver to my blogs. It was a platform full of my peers (other bloggers I knew and URLs I recognized), so it was a natural link to add my content and encourage my followers to join. That symbiotic relationship was great for growth and encouraged my focus between these platforms. YouTube seemed like an outlier that had more obstacles to sharing as part of a social media strategy, especially with formatting (vertical for Pinterest, horizontal for YouTube).
ITโS A COMFORT ZONE THING
Many bloggers are introverts โ comfortable sharing their passions and projects, but not as comfortable with a camera or speaking in public. I can write 1,000 words without batting an eye, but speaking into a camera or in front of a crowded room leaves me tongue-tied. That also means no need for makeup or changing clothes. Iโve heard some describe themselves as โlazyโ when admitting this โฆ but to me, it sounds more like intimidation.
โI want my videos to all have the same aesthetic and intro, etc. and havenโt figured all that out yet.โ โCharlee, @buildandcreatehome
And on YouTube, unlike a blog, you canโt go back and edit!
For many, Instagram is a way to bridge the gap and build up confidence on camera. I tried videos out on Instagram first and saw it as a new way to demonstrate techniques and teach, to test the reception of how my followers would react to adding video, etc. Still, it requires more effort:
โYouTube requires a different video format than Instagram and IGTV, so I see it as more work getting content made just for YouTube.โ
โMonica @house.of.esperanza
SPONSORS MAY OR MAY NOT WANT IT
For the majority of my blogโs growth, sponsors and sidebar ad networks were all focused on blogs and my social media shares โฆ not videos. They never asked, and I never offered. No one seemed to talk about it until the last few years when the lines began blurring more between bloggers, IGers, and YouTubers. Still, I hesitated because โฆ
SOMETHINGโS GOTTA GIVE
Once I had a successful blog, I had a full-time business. I had a pace for new content that readers could reasonably expect with small hints shared on Instagram to fill in content gaps. Adding YouTube to my workload would mean, somehow, adding content without compromising what Iโd already built or alienating my existing followers. It seemed like doubling or even tripling the workload โ and I was right!
โMy main reasons are: 1. lack of time and 2. the lighting in my garage is horrible and using the natural light means additional editing as the
โChar, @woodenmaven
light source (the sun) is constantly moving.โ
โTime to learn a new platform, time to learn the editing tools, and then time to do the editing itself.โ
โChris, @ironhorse_woodcraft
โLack of a decent PC to put together a proper video/tutorial.โ
โ@calibercreativeworks
โThe thought of adding one more thing to my plate with work/life balance seemed really overwhelming to me. I didnโt want to do it until I felt ready to put all of my energy behind it and do it right. Iโm still figuring out how to balance it all, but Iโm glad I finally got started.โ
โErin, @erinspainblog
Once I launched on YouTube, the video skills needed were added to my pile of to-dos for each project. Costs increased. I still needed to stop and photograph certain steps. My total work time spent per project increased considerably, which meant spreading out my content calendar, and fewer projects could be completed per month.
DOES YOUR AUDIENCE EVEN WANT IT?
I also wondered, would my audience even respond? Or would this be a new audience โ entirely separate from those Iโve reached before? Would quality suffer? Would I have to hire outside help to shed some of the extra work, and would that cost be balanced out by the views?
Now that Iโve had some success on YouTube, I know it does add value to my audience and makes more income, but itโs still a very hard balance. Half of the videos I create for my blog still donโt make it to YouTube because of the extra work required for intros/outros/voiceovers!
THEN THEREโS THE COMMENTS โฆ
YouTube comment culture has a reputation
that precedes the platform. A blog friend once called it โthe outhouse of the internet,โ and I wondered whether it would be worth trying to grow a thick skin just to share the things I was passionate about.
Itโs not that I havenโt received negative comments on my blog or Instagram before, and I still get plenty of positive comments now that
Iโm on YouTube. But the bad ones can be particularly cringey โ they can feel more like attacks and sting a little bit more. Comments about my looks or body make me uncomfortable regardless of platform, and I get them more on YouTube. I found myself creating a blocked words list for the first time. Some content creators just donโt have the mental space or energy for that, and I canโt blame them.
โHonestly, Iโve seen a lot of my blogging friends deal with horrible comments and have no desire to bring that into my life. So it just never truly appealed to me to add a lot to YouTube.โ
โSheri, @hazelandgolddesigns
With all of that said, now that Iโm on YouTube Iโm meeting an entirely new audience than I knew before, so I consider it value-add overall. Itโs been worth overcoming my assumptions, the workload, and all the times Iโve talked myself out of it.
Iโve met a ton of YouTube makers as well, which made me feel part of a new community where I can grow new skills (Iโd never tried welding or blacksmithing before!). Iโve found a few new heroes; some have even become close friends.
Looking back, it flows along similarly to my experience with platforms before it โ there
once wasnโt Pinterest, and I adapted; there once wasnโt Instagram, and I adapted to that too; YouTube is my newest challenge, and isnโt so scary, after all!
ADVERTISEMENT