In Champ Life Series, this month we have Amy (Schmittauer) Landino, an award-winning YouTube creator. She’s also an author of the best selling book Vlog Like a Boss: How to Kill It Online with Video Blogging. Amy Landino is also a professional speaker, & CoFounder at Aftermarq.
Letâs see what advice Amy Landino has got for all the newbies in video marketing.
Tell us briefly about how you started? What inspired you to step into digital marketing?
After I discovered a passion for video editing and YouTube, I began to realize that I was actually developing a trade in social media marketing. I was helping a friend one day with an issue on her Facebook, and she mentioned that sheâd worked with people in the social media marketing industry. She suggested I look into it, and it was the first Iâd heard of a career in that field. I was instantly hooked!Â
How is your entrepreneurial journey so far? And what made you enjoy it?
Considering the fact that Iâve never had to return to my previous job, I would say my entrepreneurial journey is going great! The thing I enjoy most is the freedom to decide how I spend my time and how I make my money, and thatâs something I wouldnât trade for the world.Â
Whatâs the toughest part of being a YouTube creator? Whatâs the coolest part?Â
You canât get too comfortable as a YouTube creator. The toughest part of the job is constantly staying ahead of the curve and keeping an eye on the ever-changing trends of the platform. The coolest part of being a YouTube creator is that talking to an audience comes pretty naturally to me. Being able to have those conversations with a community and make connections that way is amazing.Â
What, according to you, is one of the biggest misconceptions about making money from YouTube?Â
People tend to believe that all money made on YouTube comes from Google AdSense. Because of that belief, thereâs often a misconception that working with brands for sponsored content is âselling out.â In reality, you need to diversify your streams of revenue however possible as to not put all your eggs in one basket. The ability to work with sponsors that align with you and your values is a great way to be a resource for your community, but itâs the value that can sometimes be overlooked.Â
There is a myth that âVlogging takes too much time.â How much do you agree with this? How do you manage your work-life balance?
If youâre passionate about something, it never takes too much time. If you feel like vlogging takes too long, and you may not have the big picture in mind! Find the thing that youâre passionate about, and itâll never feel like a chore.
This applies to work-life balance too, as the time you spend working on your passion may not even feel like work. I handle work-life balance by hiring a team to take care of the tasks, and I donât need to be doing, and this allows me to give my all to the things Iâm truly passionate about.
Whatâs the motivation behind your book “Vlog Like a Boss?” How long did it take you to write?
When I started speaking, people were always asking me for a book. I would walk off stage and be swarmed with a crowd looking to buy my book, and I didnât have one. At first, I thought it was crazy that people wanted me to write how to make videos when I already made videos on the subject â for free! But people wanted a manual, so I had to deliver. It took me about two weeks to write Vlog Like a Boss.
I had blocked out 3 weeks but was invited to YouTubeâs next-up camp during one of those weeks. There, I was able to glean some incredible information for the book!
How do you think a brand should integrate video into its marketing strategy that can increase sales?
Do it yesterday. If you havenât started integrating video into your strategy in 2020, youâre already 5 steps behind. You donât have to vlog on YouTube, but think about what vlogging looks like on other platforms like Instagram or TikTok. Find where people have already set their attention, and start there.Â
According to Amy Landino, whatâs the most important element one should add in their video to make it successful?
You have to keep the person youâre speaking to in your mind. Not the audience, not the masses, just one single person. Who are you speaking to? What do they look like and what do they do with their day? What are their problems? If you canât envision that person when youâre looking into the lens of the camera, it wonât work.Â
Youâve quite an active profile on Instagram. How do you manage that? Do you believe in being omnipresent when it comes to social media marketing?
I donât believe you need to be on every single platform. But you do need to do well by the ones you use. My team and I use automation tools to map out Instagram grids and create the perfect captions in order to grab and keep attention. Itâs all about knowing what matters to your audience right now, and how you can have a conversation around that in a meaningful way.
What do you think about social media automation tools? How do you believe a social media automation tool like Social Champ can help digital marketers?
Automation tools are fantastic when you know how to use them properly, and you donât need to use every single feature of every tool. If the tool youâre using makes your life easier, take advantage of it however you can. But if an automation tool is making you look automated, itâs not a good tool for you or your community. You just have to find your balance!
Lastly, we would like to know the advice that stuck by amy landino in her journey, and whatâs your best advice for the newbies in vlogging?
If youâre new, keep it short and sweet, and above all, be generous. Thatâs the advice Iâve carried with me in my journey â give your best and give it generously. Always.Â
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