Though many companies have succeeded in reaching their audiences via social networks such as Facebook and Twitter, only a fraction have explored the option of marketing via YouTube.

Yet, YouTube is not only the second-largest search engine but also the third most-visited website in the world, only behind Google and Facebook. It receives over 1 billion unique monthly visitors, and it has about 6 billion hours of videos watched each month.

Let those numbers sink in, for a minute...

Initially, the greatest challenge is getting people to see your videos, but it can be done. I will outline the seven steps for driving traffic to your YouTube videos.

1. Research keywords

The first step is to head over to the YouTube Keyword Tool, which allows you to check how many searches specific queries receive per month. Type in the keyword that best describes the video's theme; for example, a video produced by The Walking Dead might want to optimize for "zombies." On the top right of the query results, select match type "exact" to see how many people are searching for your exact phrase. Don't worry too much about the other match types for now.

2. Scout the Competition

To check YouTube for competition, take your selected keywords and do a quick search on YouTube. The number of results is the competition. Obviously, the fewer videos that show up, the better; but anything under 500,000 should be relatively easy to optimize for.

You can compete for highly competitive keywords, but doing so will take longer. If you're not up for optimizing competitive keywords, feel free to go back to the keyword tool; it will suggest similar keywords that you can target.

3. Name your video file and upload a thumbnail

Text content is king, at least to search engines. Text is what helps search engines determine what words to rank your video for. So, having your keyword in the filename of the video that you upload to YouTube is a good way to include text that is crawlable by search engines.

For example, you would want to name your video file "zombiesmusicvideo.avi"—and not, say, "video93821.avi."

An enticing thumbnail will increase the click-through rate of your video, which leads to more views and ultimately higher ranking. Although you can pick a still shot from the video, I'd recommend uploading a relevant picture with text and colors edited in to make it stand out among the competition.

Don't trick users with a misleading thumbnail. It may get people to click on your video, but the short duration of audience retention (viewers will quickly stop watching) and the "dislike" ratings that result from the use of this tactic will hurt your rankings.

4. Include title, description, and meta tags

The keyword must be in the video title. The maximum character count is 100, but keep the title as concise as possible. The more words you use in addition to the targeted keyword, the harder it will be to rank high for that keyword.

For the description, my general rule of thumb is to include the keyword in the first and last 120 characters. The first 120 characters because that's the cut-off for what shows up in the description of videos on search results pages. This easy tweak has bumped my rankings up several spots, and in some cases... several pages.

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A Quick (but Thorough) Guide to YouTube Optimization

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Richard Jeng

Richard Jeng is a marketing consultant for MobLab, an education technology startup that delivers interactive games for social sciences learning via mobile devices.

Twitter: @RichardJeng