Twitch Strategies » Khaos Kollective https://www.khaoskollective.com/category/twitch-strategies/ Don't Sweat The Technique Sun, 05 Jul 2020 17:29:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.khaoskollective.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/cropped-SiteFavIcon-32x32.png Twitch Strategies » Khaos Kollective https://www.khaoskollective.com/category/twitch-strategies/ 32 32 Create A Community, Not Just A Viewer Base – Grow Your Twitch Following https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/09/16/create-a-community-not-just-a-viewer-base/ https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/09/16/create-a-community-not-just-a-viewer-base/#comments Mon, 17 Sep 2018 02:09:14 +0000 https://www.ninjaginza.com/?p=3338 How often have you opened up someone’s stream and only minutes into your interactions with the streamer, they’re asking for a follow? Sure, we should be supporting smaller streamers and every follow they get helps, but take a second to look at the reality of it. In this scenario, your follow will likely come out [...]

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Streamer Perspective - Grow Your Twitch Following

How often have you opened up someone’s stream and only minutes into your interactions with the streamer, they’re asking for a follow? Sure, we should be supporting smaller streamers and every follow they get helps, but take a second to look at the reality of it.

In this scenario, your follow will likely come out of generosity. Not due to your sincere interest in seeing the content they create or being a part of the community they’re building. Community is the foundation that your channel must be built off of and the content you create should resemble the community watching it.

In this article, we’ll uncover some of the best approaches to building that community and filling your channel with viewers who are there to support it. Grow Your Twitch Following!

What Is Your Why?

In general, people are drawn to others by common interest or aspiration to be similar. The same goes for twitch viewership. We frequent channels playing a specific game we’re interested in or portraying a certain “feel” to the content they provide.

Maybe you view Ninja for the witty and highly skilled nature of his gameplay on Fortnite. Or perhaps his down to earth personality and pronounced generosity.

Maybe you’re a fan of the “2 time BlockBuster video game champ” drdisrespect. Whether it’s the impressive gameplay, retro theme or the 90’s hardcore gamer schtick.

We all have random channels we visit for sporadic entertainment, but the channels we frequent usually have an underlying why.

So what is yours? Are you aiming to top the DOTA game directory as a MOBA badass? Do you have a funny personality that makes single player games better than they were intended to be? Are you a WoW guild leader looking for more guild members in an effort to mop up the rival guilds on your server?

Let’s Not Make This About The Money

Sure, plenty of streamers have grown a significant following that pays the bills but that shouldn’t be the primary reason for streaming. If you’re only hitting that Go Live button to rake in some dough, you may want to reconsider.

Passion will eventually play a huge role in your enthusiasm for streaming. Many streamers complain about the time and effort they have to commit to not only grow their channel but also maintain it.

According to Ninja, he was offline for only 48 hours and lost 40,000 subs.

Your community is going to want you around as much as possible. You’re their morning routine, their evening entertainment and/or their late night indulgence. If you don’t have a passion for the why in your community, you’re going to burn out.

Broadcast Your Why!

Put it in your stream panels, on your twitter, make a facebook group supporting it, incorporate it into your overlay, title your streams with it and if it’s something measurable; show progress.

Seriously. How will anyone find interest in following your journey if they don’t know what you’re setting out to do in the first place?

I hate it when someone gives vague advice so let me be a little more specific.

Just to grab a random subject out of the air, let’s say you have an obsession with rescuing abused hamsters.
Let’s put that into the About Me section of your stream panels. Maybe show a pic of the latest rescue there too.
Tweet pics of hamsters and articles relating to them with your twitch channel in your profile.
Create a Facebook group where others can post hamster adoption.
Maybe a subtle animation of a hamster giving a thumbs up every time someone follows or subs on stream.
Go live with a stream label like “20 hamsters saved from hungry cats today!”
Once in awhile, share a hamster rescue you experienced or read about.

Gather Like-minded Viewers From EVERYWHERE

So many channels fail to grow simply because the streamer is depending solely on twitch for exposure.
Yes there are methods to make sure you’re visible to more viewers but if you don’t capitalize on the other social platforms, you’re really limiting your reach.
Keywords on twitter are incredible for putting yourself out there for loads of new people to see. You should be posting frequently on keywords that relate to your why.
Facebook has groups sprinkled throughout the platform that have a wealthy amount of discussion on any given topic. Your participation will drive people to your channel so long as you broadcast your channel either to the group or in your feed.
Of course, YouTube can easily spill over into Twitch. Just throw your channel link in the vids you publish so your viewers can find you. It’s also a good idea to include it in your banner.
There’s a few others (like SnapChat, TikTok, and Instagram) that can be useful depending on your approach but it would make more sense to narrow it down to your specific why to discuss how to use them.

Thank You, Come Again!

My why here on NinjaGinza.com and on my channel MayjorMayham is simple. I see great streamers fail far too often. There are so many great personalities in this world that just don’t get the attention they deserve. If anything I produce can help them succeed, I’m doing what I’m meant to do.
Ultimately that will be in the form of a game that promotes the winners, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves. 1 piece at a time 🙂

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Consistency Is Key – How To Get More Viewers On Twitch https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/03/24/consistency-is-key-how-to-get-more-viewers-on-twitch-2/ https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/03/24/consistency-is-key-how-to-get-more-viewers-on-twitch-2/#comments Sat, 24 Mar 2018 18:46:32 +0000 https://www.ninjaginza.com/?p=3069 Ever wonder how streams manage to grow faster than yours and get more viewers on twitch? There’s a key component to gaining the momentum to show up in the top row of the game you play. Consistency! As a game streamer, it’s kind of expected that you spend a lot of time gaming… But the [...]

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show up in the top row of the game you play. Consistency! As a game streamer, it’s kind of expected that you spend a lot of time gaming… But the time we spend building our underground home, storming the enemy base or camping the play area with only 7 survivors left isn’t always spent on a regular schedule. This is what makes streaming a challenge for those who strive to become a well known streamer. You can’t just show up when you get a free moment away from real life obligations and expect your viewers to be there.

Let’s Make A Comparison

Imagine a popular tv series. Let’s say… The Walking Dead. If you’re a fan of the series, you know the schedule. Usually new episodes are Sundays at prime time and it’s on for a hour with exception to premieres and finales. It goes without saying, you’re going to clear your schedule for that hour, at that time in order to see the show. In fact, if you’re a die hard fan you’re going to make sure everything else is scheduled around it. “NOTHING SHALL STOP ME FROM SEEING MY ZAMBIE SHOW!” Walking Dead Fans

You’re Expected To Be There!

So… Why provide any less for your viewers? You’re the show. They’re the audience. They need to know when you’ll be on and how long. If there’s something that upsets that schedule, they need to know. Post it to twitter, post it to your channel feed, maybe a quick video — something.

Start small, get big. Like a pe–… Pelican…

Trying to commit hours to specific days and times can be challenging. Just the thought alone can be daunting simply because we enjoy the freedom of gaming whenever we want or whenever we get the time, right? Trust me, I get it. Let’s not allow that huge channel-stomping stormcloud piss on our parade though. Take it a step at a time. Start small and build up to a schedule that doesn’t completely disrupt your life. If your lifestyle doesn’t allow a whole lot of time to stream — Try this. Take a small chunk of your week. Dedicate 2, maybe 3 days you can absolutely be on stream and throw a couple hours into it. Put it in your twitch panels, on your offline graphics and announce it on your feeds. Twitch Announcement Also, plan the game you’ll stream. And! Have a backup game. Servers go down, issues surface, games like No Man’s Sky are marketed as multiplayer… Things happen. Now, you’re probably thinking: 2 hours? Why only 2? I play WoW and it’s going to take a minimum of 4 hours just to get a raid party together! That’s fine. Check the Twitch history books — Nobody was ever disappointed by a stream going on longer than scheduled.

Now You’ve Got Their Attention!

It doesn’t matter that you only have 2-3 days scheduled. What matters is viewers know when to expect you online. They can plan to be in your channel when you’re live. That’s HUGE! On top of that, they know what game you plan to play. If they don’t like the game, they won’t be disappointed that you didn’t choose something they wanted to see because they’ve likely made a decision to either be there for the game or be there just to see you stream. Now you’re off to a promising start. Carry on with this for a couple weeks then it’s time to increase the days. This my friend — THIS… is where the streamers are separated from the uhh… dudes that only game. And don’t stream… All the time…

Do You Have What It Takes?!

Seriously. Once you get up to a weekly schedule that has you on stream nearly everyday, you’re going to either love it or hate it. Some people begin to feel “forced” to game at this point. Others take to it like a dog to a big stuffed animal… They LOVE IT! Dog Humping Toy That is something you’ll have to search within yourself for — find your character sheet and see if you put points into the Streamer class. If not, well then I guess we’ll see ya around! Buh-bye now. Enjoy the bottom of the leaderboards while streamers put the game hours in to be badass!

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WAIT! You shouldn’t stream the hottest game on Twitch. Here’s why… – Twitch Strategy https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/03/23/hottest-twitch-game-twitch-strategy/ https://www.khaoskollective.com/2018/03/23/hottest-twitch-game-twitch-strategy/#comments Sat, 24 Mar 2018 02:52:23 +0000 https://www.ninjaginza.com/?p=3084 In the past year (2017), there was 1,799 channels broadcasting League of Legends with an average of 114,263 viewers spread across those channels. It may be tempting to jump into a match of League of Legends and flip on the stream with hopes to pull in some of those viewers but there’s a few things [...]

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In the past year (2017), there was 1,799 channels broadcasting League of Legends with an average of 114,263 viewers spread across those channels.
It may be tempting to jump into a match of League of Legends and flip on the stream with hopes to pull in some of those viewers but there’s a few things to take into account before doing so. We have some tips you can add to your Twitch strategy.
First thing’s first!

The Fold - Twitch Strategy

The Fold

What’s “The Fold”? It’s a term used by web developers that defines the bottom of the browser window before scrolling. So, above the fold is everything you see without scrolling down. Below the fold is… Nvm, you get it.

Most viewers select a channel that appears above the fold. Just like Google search results produces more traffic for the first page of results, above the fold on twitch provides more viewers to channels within the first 3 rows.

Streaming a game that is going to put you into a higher row on the game page is a legitimate strategy. I have seen many fast growing channels use this approach.

Not only do you reach the sweet spot on the game page but you also put yourself in a prime location for raids. Let’s not forget the crowds you receive when a bigger channel goes offline either.

Your energy on stream is broadcasted to your viewers

If you’re only streaming the games sitting at the top of the game directory for the sake of pulling in viewers and you’re not actually enjoying the game you’re playing, it’s going to show on stream.

This is a problem. If you’ve spent any time listening to advice from popular streamers, you’ve probably heard how easily viewers pick up on your energy.

When you play a game that you sincerely enjoy, your viewers are going to enjoy it with you. You’ll have more to talk about, you’ll be more excited by game progression and you’ll have a better stream overall.

Build a community not just a good showing

Another good reason to look for a game that isn’t in the top row is how easy building a community becomes when you’re not sitting on the bottom of the page, 50 scrolls down.

Let’s take Subnautica for instance.

Subnautica Twitch Screenshot - Twitch Strategy

At the time of this writing, there are 2169 viewers, it’s about 5 rows down and you need a minimum of 10 viewers to get into the fold. 10 viewers is not hard to achieve especially with a game like Subnautica.

This game has a good sized following because it has so much depth to it (no pun intended). Therefore, people are interested in watching streamers new to the game. As a matter of fact, the top row has 2 streams indicating that they’re new to the game.

Given those key factors, anyone new to the game will likely receive a few fresh views from people that follow the game.

While the initial views are great, the biggest factor at play here is how many of those viewers will want to see you play through to the end. Whether that’s in 1 stream or multiple, it begins to build a community that roots you on and if they like your style, they’ll come back for more.

That’s exactly what you’re looking for. More active followers leads to more viewers from the beginning of the stream and more momentum to reach the top.

In conclusion…

Just like websites sitting at the top of the search results when you’re looking for “best VR strip club game” — you’re not going to click page 32 and select something from there. You’re going to go with something off of the first page and very rarely anything beyond that.

This strategy is useful for the average streamer with a small following and an open mind to the games that aren’t leading the bandwagon. If that’s you, I recommend giving this a shot.

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