1)
-use more popular music. i like electronica and just about anything however even i thought it was very irritating. it makes it hard to concentrate on what you are saying.
-you might want to spend less time focusing on the obvious such as that it came in an amazon box (we can read amazon) or that the box the motherboard comes in in very pretty (we can see) or that what the board lists on the box.
-before you do the video read through the specs in detail. it may help to go over all of the functions in greater detail than what you did.
-when doing an overall explanation of motherboard layout do so from a top view if you can (perhaps mount the camera higher and from above).
-point out the why you picked the product instead of various others on the market including what the other options are and how it will affect performance.
-perhaps have a better backdrop for doing reviews and brighter lighting.
-perhaps add graphics on screen with excerpts from the manual eplaining features of the manual as you go over the board.
-go over positive and negative reviews of the board (from users not review sites) and your take on them.
2)
-post video replies to other channels
-post more in depth reviews
-post benchmarks (didnt see if any of your videos had them)
-have a seperate channel for all of your off the wall, non-pc nonsense vlog videos. people wanting pc tech reviews and unboxings do not want to see this crud. it also makes you seem less credible when you have "TMI" or "funny fat people" right next to tech unboxing. hardly professional and you arent going to get as many viewers (let alone sponsors) with this kind of setup.
3)
-not going to happen unless you get more popular. work on that first
-do you honestly expect sponsorship at 10 videos? also keep in mind not even half are pc oriented. you need much more before you can even think about sponsorship.
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video i used for reference though i did peek at a few highlights on others..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXDswJr1zow&feature=c4-o...
what makes an unboxing or building video great isnt that you can show a pretty picture of the motherboard and name what the parts are. or even that you can assemble them correctly. honestly anyone who has done a little reading on the subject or has any inclination at all for computers can do this.
while all very well and good what you need to add in addition to such things is:
-the reason i went for a 990fx chipset instead of a 970 or 990x chipset is because.... (i'll give a few for examples)
*when using amd FX cpus you do not have to perform a bios update. on most 970 chipsets you will need to perform a bios update to use the FX series.
*i plan on heavy overclocking. while the 970 does support overclocking it is not as stable and does not support as high of an overclock.
*i did not go with a 990x chipset because i wanted to sli/cf high end video cards (honestly thats the only real difference) or... i went with a 990fx over a 990x because they were the same price.
*i went with asrock instead of asus or gigabyte because it was a cheaper and seemed to have the same options for a lower price than the asus (or other brand) versions.
*my thoughts on the only 45% 5 star reviews and the multiple bad reviews listed here
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E168... are as follows.........
also of note: in your cpu unboxing i did not see you on video touching your case before you touched your cpu before you placed it into the motherboard. i did not even hear you mention it. perhaps i missed it because i skipped through most of it but this is a very big deal. it should be in big print on screen and clearly stressed with words if not showing you actually touching the case or using a grounding strap.
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now dont get offended as this is for constructive criticism... but this is my take on the videos no-holds barred...
it looks like some run of the mill average kid/guy/person bought some hardware and without knowing a whole lot about it attempts to create a video.
(you arent the first person to come along on here wondering why nobody watches their videos and wanting to become famous. honestly it takes a good bit of hard work and does not happen overnight. while your videos were certainly not the worst quality that i've seen they definitely were rather run-of-the-mill and lacked something special which set it appart from others)
my opinion based on reading the post above on TH...
it looks like someone with only a few not-so-good videos is expecting sponsorship and viewer respect/subs overnight.
(it will take time to get respect and you need to do alot more work to get there. if you cant afford lots of parts then at least you can do is cover all aspects of pc building. if you want i can give you a HUGE list of topics to cover)
again, no disrespect intended. that is a 100% truthful no punches pulled opinion. now do i think you can get where you want? if you try your hardest to improve the quality of your videos, are much more active in creating videos and provide information/knowledge not on other videos? then yes i do believe you can succeed.
i'm a rather harsh judge (as i'm well versed in pc building, parts selection, etcetera) and i even harshly judge most of the larger well known channels so its not just you. if you can impress me then consider that an honor and that you've pretty much made it where you want to be with your videos.
so kudos for now at wanting to make videos but get to work at making them better if you want to grow in popularity.