Just to follow up, I'll share some things I've been doing with
my documentary to illustrate some of the things I'm talking about. It's not a Youtube series, but in many ways it's very similar.
Now I am not suggesting that what I am doing is the be-all, end-all (it isn't). But I probably have numbers that are much closer to what you guys are hoping for, so here's what I do...
The documentary is really an extension of the blog (when it's out you may be surprised by how literally it's an extension of the blog) and the blog has always been very simple. My unspoken deal with its audience is that if they check the site everyday or so I'll do my very best to show them something cool, fun or interesting in puppetry that they have probably never seen before. Post are usually (but not always) short because people don't like to read a lot on the internet. Whenever possible, I don't just share a video, I also share information about the process behind a video as well as links where people who are really interested can discover even more.
When I stick to that basic formula it seems to do very well. When I deviate from that, well, not so much. The reason why I think deviating doesn't work is because the audience knows what to expect and then all of sudden if I make a drastic change there is sort of a collective "huh? What's this?".
When I do make changes, I try to make them slow and gradual over time so people get used to them. That also allows me to test and refine things a lot.
Very little with PuppetVision is random. Tweets, Facebook posts, even the time the blog posts go up has been researched and tested. For example, lately I've been posting at around 4:30 am EST, which is insanely early in Canada, but also when people in the UK tend to start checking the site (4:30am EST = 10:30am UK time).
And although the blog post might go up at 4:30 am EST, it isn't usually shared on Facebook until 2 p.m. EST. This is because - for reasons that I do not entirely understand - if I share anything on Facebook around 2-3 pm it often reaches 1,000-2,000 people organically (no paid promotion). Yet if I post an hour earlier fewer than one hundred people will see it.
Weird, huh?
Although the blog's readership comes from 100 countries, roughly 60-70% of it is in just five places - The United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia and South Africa. That's where most of my focus is. While the blog covers puppetry from all over the world, it's probably disproportionately focused on those countries, because that's where its readers are.
(Next on the list is to build up the audience in Singapore, New Zealand and Ireland, which are the major English speaking countries where the blog isn't widely read...yet).
Last year I almost launched an Asia-focused version of PuppetVision. The plan was to launch the site in English and Chinese and expand to Japanese and Korean within 6-12 months. I had a couple people lined up to help with translation and we were planning to launch with about 100 of the most popular/relevant posts from PuppetVision ready to go. At the last minute I begged off, not because it was a bad idea (I still think it's a very good idea), but because I realized it was too much, too soon and would distract me from finishing the documentary and everything else I was already doing.
When the documentary comes out, we're focused on festivals and screenings in the countries where the blog is already read because we already have an audience there. For the same reason, the film itself has a lot content tailored to those audiences...as well as a few others where I hope to go next.
It's been a lot of trial and error (and still is), but one thing I've learned is that if you build it they will come...but they only stick around if you give them what they want.