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Professionally, I use YouTube as a test bed. I don't have the schedule necessary to be a regular YouTuber.
As a consumer, I'm a power user. I even have "wallpaper screens" with things like fireplaces and rainy cyberpunk landscapes playing in the background. So it's going for hours a day.
I agree with the assessment here. I've already been flagged for links and keywords.
I'm not drawing heat for just saying a web site in the video. So I'll often say "This is Jay from FetishArtist.net" when I do a video, and likewise do shoutouts for my clients. But I believe this is still technically against TOS.
What I've experienced and learned from peers is, videos should be over 10 minutes long. While attention span drops after 4 minutes, YouTube loves videos 10-60 minutes long. Which is funny, because there are a lot of times where I'm like "I just need something 5-10 minutes long before I go to bed."
YouTube Shorts (and Instagram reels) are very much in demand. So if you can do 1 minute Shorts at least once a week. That's gold. Content farmers will often crib 1 minute clips of movies, Joe Rogan, Neil deGrasse Tyson, or use AI content for monetization.
ReFashioned Hippie posts comedy shorts as often as several times a day, and that's become the college fund for her daughter. She's never taken her clothes off and is bigger than average cam girls.
Livestreaming doesn't have as much oversight. V-Tubers Absolute Unit and Dashie Li and their fan base get away with more discussion than you could on an adult site. The livestream once a week and have a great following. Once again, you probably could not get away with keywords and a URL in the description, but you could probably have a watermark, a logo in the background, or just say the site name in the discussion. The disadvantage is livestreams are time intensive, going 1-5 hours.
If you can drive the traffic to a SFW site, also look into paying for advertising. I recommend 30 second ads. YouTube is desperate for ad revenue. Ads are coming up ranging from real estate scams, quack medicine, paid propaganda. And let's not forget some ads are for quasi-NSFW work products like Manscape and Hims. Some of these "ads" are over 40 minutes long. So YouTube is not doing much oversight.
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Publicist and owner of HighOctaneHeart.com, FetishArtist.net and FetishForLife.com
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