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As a YouTuber, crafting a compelling story is essential for retaining viewers and increasing views. Whether you’re new to YouTube or an experienced creator, these principles can elevate your content and keep your audience engaged from start to finish. Here are 21 commandments for YouTube storytelling.
1. The Power of a Banger Idea
A great title and thumbnail cannot come from a mediocre idea. Don’t try to dress up a weak concept. Spending just 10 minutes refining your video’s core idea can save you 7 hours down the line.
2. Reaffirm the Click Immediately
Your viewers clicked for a reason—acknowledge that right away. Don’t waste time with lengthy introductions unless you are the exact reason they clicked. Keep the momentum of that click going to avoid losing your audience early on.
3. Pace ≠ Talking Speed
Pacing is about more than how fast you talk. I’ve seen plenty of videos with over 80% retention at the 30-second mark, and they weren’t rushed. One video with 87% retention had a relaxed speaking pace, similar to an interesting podcast. It’s about engagement, not speed.
4. Stakes Are More Than Consequences
Stakes in storytelling aren’t just about the outcome; they’re about how much the characters care about the outcome. As a YouTuber, you are the character, and your emotional investment will resonate more than flashy production. Show your genuine care, and viewers will care too.
5. Context Is Key
As a creator, it’s easy to assume viewers will follow along with your narrative, but that’s not always the case. Never leave your audience lost—contextual clarity is critical. Every edit you make must ensure that the viewer understands what’s happening. Confusion kills engagement.
6. Sameness Is Boring
The phrase “watching paint dry” exists for a reason—monotony is the enemy of interest. But it’s not just about varying visuals. Break up sameness in audio, emotion, intensity, and pacing. Keep things dynamic and destroy sameness strategically.
7. Juxtaposition Enhances Emotions
Juxtaposition creates context and heightens emotional impact. For example, my next video is titled, “I Type 100 Words Per Minute…But on My Phone.” That’s interesting, but it’s more impactful when you compare it to the average typing speed of 40 words per minute on a normal keyboard. Juxtaposition adds weight.
7b. Juxtaposition in Editing
Creator and editor Hayden Hillier-Smith does an incredible job illustrating this with his "Contrast Editing" technique, which he discussed while reviewing Logan Paul's intro. By juxtaposing high-intensity action with calm talking head A-roll, he creates a powerful emotional contrast.
8. Genuine Conflict Is Compelling
Conflict makes for great stories because they teach us how to navigate challenges. Whether it’s a battle with yourself, others, or the world, conflict is what pulls viewers in. In his book The Science of Storytelling, Will Storr explains how these conflicts help us learn to survive. Use this natural human fascination to your advantage—show real conflict.
9. Foreshadowing Builds Anticipation
Many YouTube creators (myself included!) often forget to foreshadow important moments throughout their videos. Teasing future payoffs throughout your content keeps viewers watching longer. Creators like @airrack and @MrBeast are masters at this technique, ensuring anticipation builds until the big reveal.
10. Build Toward a Climax
The best videos feel like a steady, bumpy ramp leading to a climax—the moment that leaves viewers hooked. This “best part” isn’t accidental; it’s crafted carefully to turn casual viewers into fans. The climax is where you truly convert viewers into subscribers.
11. Emotional Meaning > Superficial Engagement
The YouTube landscape is shifting away from superficial engagement tactics. Rather than chasing views through clickbait, focus on creating emotionally meaningful content. Tell stories that you genuinely love, and you’ll create something more lasting than just a spike in views—you’ll build a loyal audience.
12. Opening Visuals Reaffirm The Thumbnail
The opening visuals of the hook should match the thumbnail. That immediate feedback is already a mini-payoff in itself.
13. Reduce Sponsorship Dips By Integrating Them Properly
One way to lessen the dip in retention for sponsors is to do flip quickly between sponsorship and a “hook” story where you want to see the outcome.
MrBeast does this in his Squid Game video, flipping between the game and the Brawl Stars sponsorship.
14. Understand Viewer Gaze
You always have to be aware of the viewer’s gaze.
If they get lost, then the emotional impact is less because they don’t know what just happened.
Here is a simple example of using a highlight so that the viewer doesn’t get lost amongst the crowd, also from MrBeast.
14. Save The Cat
This is the name of book which is a staple in film storytelling, but it refers to the fact that it’s *extremely* important for the viewer to see something that makes a character likeable in order to become actually invested.
What’s unique to YouTube is that sometimes this Save The Cat moment already starts from the thumbnail.
The more interesting the character, the better momentum you carry into the vid.
The thing that gives you hope about YouTube is that it doesn’t matter what the size of your channel is.
1. packaging a story well
2. telling a really good story
3. that people want to hear
4. consistently
…is basically the formula for growth. For example, when the mangoose published the below video, he had 4.26K subs – but the video still got 497K views:
15. Don't Scuff The Audio
A bad audio experience is actually worse than a bad videographic experience.
- Reduce the volume of music when someone is talking, often more than you might expect to. For example, I'm often putting music tracks to -25dB on a video where the voice is important.
- Edit with headphones on...
- And if you're really trying hard, try to analyse your own videos on all platforms, including: mobile, TV, and computers. With and without headphones.
16. Avoid over-explanation at all costs!
Yeah.
17. If explanation is necessary, consider using progressive onboarding.
Rather than telling viewers every single rule at once, see if there's a way to introduce rules one bit at a time. This is less cognitively taxing for the viewer, and helps them enjoy the video whilst still understanding it.
18. Visual dynamics are super important
If you record yourself gazing left to right in a mirror, you’ll notice your eyes jitter (saccade) even if you try to do it as smoothly as possible.
But not if you’re following a pen or finger.
We watch movement. So edit accordingly.
19. Practice energy range in presentation style
Not done as much these days fortunately, but in the early days of hyper-optimization of YouTube videos, people used to think they had to be really loud and fast for the camera in order to maintain energy.
It's still valuable to practice delivery by extending range. You want to try practicing at 5/10 energy, then 8/10, then 13/10. And then practice going 12, 11, 10, 9...until 3. If you record all of this on video, what you can do is then immediately review the footage and see which "energy" is the best for you.
It's often surprising what feels like it works, to what is actually the best outcome for a video.
20. Use IRL watches as a real-life retention graph
Watch other people watching your videos, but in real life. Rope your friends in!
When people are bored, you can see them looking away. Jokes that you thought were funny, are completely ignored. And stuff you thought made sense, is confusing.
This is extremely valuable.
21. The retention graph is a must-analyze!
When analysing your retention graph, actually take notes on every little thing.
Here’s my own note on an iPad tablet comparison video I once did.
Every one of your videos should be better than the last.
Want to grow your channel faster with YouTube Storytelling?
I've created a FREE 5-day email mini-course called The YouTube Storytelling Primer.
- Get more views
- Increase retention
- Make better ideas, titles, and thumbnails
- Have hooks that captivate viewers
Click here to check it out now! Dabi's YouTube Storytelling Primer