Don’t have enough time to get everything uploaded tonight, so I’ll have to do it tomorrow. But I’ll go ahead and answer your earlier question. Because Amazon has actual humans reviewing your videos, they end up being inconsistent on which videos they approve or reject. My advice though, and these aren’t rules, just my opinion: 1. Upload all 3 at the same time, and only three. You only get 3 total chances, so if you only upload 1 video and get rejected, that uses 1 of your chances before you even got to your second video. If you upload 3 and get rejected, that still only uses 1 of your chances. 2. Show yourself in the video. Later this isn’t as important, but you want to prove that it’s actually your original video, and nothing does that better than your own face being in the video. 3. Make the videos horizontal and 60 seconds or more. It shows you can make a quality review vs someone that’s tryin to get in with a low quality 15 second clip. 4: Pick 100% neutral products for the 3 videos. Don’t review a product that may cause you to say something that sounds like medical advice. Example: I had a video with a marker that one of the features was that it was “non toxic”, and they flagged me for saying that. These are just a few suggestions. Hope it helps!
@@agentalexcamp this is fantastic! Thank you so much. Unfortunately I’ve used one chance (uploaded two videos before I considered the influencer program, and they counted as a part of the 3), but I’m hoping I can get through with my next attempt. Appreciate the tips!
Great video showing what is possible. Do you know if a click is tied to views? I have considerably less clicks to views and not sure what a click is classed as?
Yea that isn’t super clear on the platform. The only thing I can guess is that “views” are the people that scroll through the pics to the video section, and saw your thumbnail among the others on the carousel. Kinda like an “impression” on social media. Then “clicks” I would think is someone seeing your video on the carousel and choosing to actually click and watch your video specifically. For example, 500 people look at a certain product today, then 10% of them actually go to the video carousel, so you get 50 “views” for that product. Then 10% of those 50 actually choose to watch your video, that would be 5 “clicks” on your video. Thats the only possibility I can think of.
@agentalexcamp that makes sense. Hopefully, amazon clears some things up. How did sellers get in touch with you to create videos? Email or through social media?
@@DIYwithCam They reached out through email, but I’ve heard that they will through social media also. Make sure to frequently check your spam/junk folder on email so you don’t miss any.
@agentalexcamp thanks for the response. Another question. How did they find your email? Was is posted on your storefront? I just started last week and i want to make sure i am able to take advantage of this.
@@savgw7959 I’ve heard that you’re not allowed to post your email on your storefront. Since my social media accounts are linked, I’m sure they go onto one of my profiles and find my email that way, where I have everything listed
Another great video - thanks! Looking forward to seeing more about getting that "blue lock" removed on my account.
Don’t have enough time to get everything uploaded tonight, so I’ll have to do it tomorrow. But I’ll go ahead and answer your earlier question. Because Amazon has actual humans reviewing your videos, they end up being inconsistent on which videos they approve or reject. My advice though, and these aren’t rules, just my opinion:
1. Upload all 3 at the same time, and only three. You only get 3 total chances, so if you only upload 1 video and get rejected, that uses 1 of your chances before you even got to your second video. If you upload 3 and get rejected, that still only uses 1 of your chances.
2. Show yourself in the video. Later this isn’t as important, but you want to prove that it’s actually your original video, and nothing does that better than your own face being in the video.
3. Make the videos horizontal and 60 seconds or more. It shows you can make a quality review vs someone that’s tryin to get in with a low quality 15 second clip.
4: Pick 100% neutral products for the 3 videos. Don’t review a product that may cause you to say something that sounds like medical advice. Example: I had a video with a marker that one of the features was that it was “non toxic”, and they flagged me for saying that.
These are just a few suggestions. Hope it helps!
@@agentalexcamp this is fantastic! Thank you so much. Unfortunately I’ve used one chance (uploaded two videos before I considered the influencer program, and they counted as a part of the 3), but I’m hoping I can get through with my next attempt. Appreciate the tips!
@@GadgetGatherer happy to help!
The new video is now live!
Great video brother
Thank you! Will be posting a November review in the next couple days!
Great video showing what is possible. Do you know if a click is tied to views? I have considerably less clicks to views and not sure what a click is classed as?
Yea that isn’t super clear on the platform. The only thing I can guess is that “views” are the people that scroll through the pics to the video section, and saw your thumbnail among the others on the carousel. Kinda like an “impression” on social media. Then “clicks” I would think is someone seeing your video on the carousel and choosing to actually click and watch your video specifically.
For example, 500 people look at a certain product today, then 10% of them actually go to the video carousel, so you get 50 “views” for that product. Then 10% of those 50 actually choose to watch your video, that would be 5 “clicks” on your video. Thats the only possibility I can think of.
@agentalexcamp that makes sense. Hopefully, amazon clears some things up. How did sellers get in touch with you to create videos? Email or through social media?
@@DIYwithCam They reached out through email, but I’ve heard that they will through social media also. Make sure to frequently check your spam/junk folder on email so you don’t miss any.
How did the brands reach out to for a partnership?
99% of them have reached out through email! I’ve only had a couple reach out through Instagram/facebook
@agentalexcamp
thanks for the response. Another question. How did they find your email? Was is posted on your storefront? I just started last week and i want to make sure i am able to take advantage of this.
@@savgw7959 I’ve heard that you’re not allowed to post your email on your storefront. Since my social media accounts are linked, I’m sure they go onto one of my profiles and find my email that way, where I have everything listed
Thanks very much for your help. Been doin this for a week now and your vids are a huge help. Good luck to you.
@@savgw7959 Happy to help! Will be posting November results within the next couple of days!