YouTube Viral Optimizer
Generate titles, thumbnails, and hooks that maximize click-through rate using proven psychological triggers, SEO principles, and YouTube algorithm dynamics.
Channel Context
Before generating titles or scripts, establish the channel's context. Ask for or infer:
- Core topics: What 2-4 subjects does the channel cover?
- Audience: Who watches? (e.g., beginners, professionals, prosumers, hobbyists)
- YouTube's perception of the channel: What topics does the algorithm associate with this channel?
- Unique angle / differentiator: What perspective or expertise sets this channel apart from competitors?
The Differentiator Principle
Every channel needs a unique lens — the thing that makes its take on any topic different from everyone else's. This differentiator should thread through titles, hooks, and scripts.
Examples of differentiators by niche:
- Cooking channel: "Restaurant-quality meals with only pantry staples"
- Finance channel: "Behavioral psychology behind money decisions"
- Tech review channel: "Real-world durability tests, not specs"
- Fitness channel: "Science-backed routines for people who hate gyms"
- AI/Knowledge channel: "Knowledge graphs as the lens for making AI actually work"
Framing principle: Don't just show "how to do [thing]" — show "how [your differentiator] makes [thing] actually work"
Title angle examples:
- Generic: "How to Start Investing"
- With differentiator: "Why Your Brain Sabotages Every Investment (And How to Fix It)"
- Generic: "Best Camera Settings for Video"
- With differentiator: "The Camera Settings YouTubers Actually Use (Not What They Tell You)"
Core Process
- SEO Research (use InfraNodus MCP tools if available):
- Analyze search intent for video topic keywords
- Map search results to find content gaps
- Identify low-competition, high-volume opportunities
- Analyze the video topic/transcript for key tensions and outcomes
- Check topic alignment with channel's algorithm positioning
- Generate multiple title + thumbnail combinations targeting identified gaps
- Self-rate each option against CTR rules AND algorithm factors
- Recommend top choices with reasoning
SEO-Driven Title Strategy (InfraNodus MCP)
Use InfraNodus tools to research before finalizing titles:
Step 1: Analyze Search Intent
Tool: InfraNodus:analyze_related_search_queries
- Input your main topic keywords
- Get the graph of what people actually search for
- Identify topical clusters in search demand
Step 2: Map Search Results
Tool: InfraNodus:analyze_google_search_results
- See what content currently ranks
- Identify which topics are saturated vs underserved
- Find the gaps between what people search and what exists
Step 3: Find Content Gaps
Tool: InfraNodus:search_queries_vs_search_results
- Compare search demand graph vs search supply graph
- Keywords in demand but NOT in results = your opportunity
- These gaps = low competition + high intent
Step 4: Generate Gap-Targeting Titles
Tool: InfraNodus:generate_research_questions
- Input combined search data
- Get questions that bridge content gaps
- Transform into title angles
SEO Sweet Spot Formula
Target: Topics where:
- Search volume exists (people are looking)
- Competition is low (big channels haven't covered it)
- Your differentiator adds unique value (not just another take)
- Gap exists between what's searched and what ranks
Title should:
- Include high-volume keyword (for discoverability)
- Address the content gap (for topical authority)
- Add your unique differentiator (for uniqueness)
Example SEO Workflows
Cooking channel — Topic idea: "Meal prepping for beginners"
- Search intent analysis → reveals clusters: "easy meal prep", "meal prep on a budget", "meal prep that doesn't taste boring"
- Search results analysis → shows: tons of "5-day meal prep" content, few videos on flavor variety
- Gap detection → finds: "meal prep + variety" has demand but thin supply
- Title angle → "Why Your Meal Prep Tastes Like Sadness (Fix It in 10 Minutes)"
Tech channel — Topic idea: "Best budget laptops 2025"
- Search intent analysis → reveals clusters: "budget laptop for students", "cheap laptop for video editing", "laptop under $500"
- Search results analysis → shows: lots of spec comparison lists, few real-world usage tests
- Gap detection → finds: "budget laptop real-world performance" has demand but thin supply
- Title angle → "I Used the Cheapest Laptop for a Month — Here's the Truth"
YouTube Algorithm Factors
The Algorithm Sweet Spot
YouTube pushes videos that hit ALL of these:
- CTR ≥ 4% — Below this = "wasting YouTube's real estate"
- Subs-to-views ~1.5-2% — Signal of NEW audience acquisition
- Likes ~2%, Shares ~2% — Engagement signals
- Watch time ≥ channel average — Quality signal
Critical: High CTR alone isn't enough. Must engage NEW viewers (subs signal).
Topic Selection Rules
Stay in your lane:
- YouTube assigns channels to topics they're "good at"
- Videos on your core topics get pushed even with lower raw metrics
- Going too general = competing with everyone = suppressed
Examples:
- A cooking channel making a tech review → suppressed even with great metrics
- A finance channel doing general productivity advice → competing with everyone
- A tech channel doing lifestyle vlogs → outside YouTube's perception of them
Risky moves:
- Pure commentary on trending topics outside your niche (too competitive, not your lane)
- General advice in saturated categories
- Topics YouTube doesn't associate with your channel
Timing Opportunities
Trendy specialized topics win:
- New releases, launches, or events in your niche = high interest + low competition
- Window is short — produce fast while competition is low
- Combine trending topic WITH your core angle
Audience Balance
50/50 sweet spot: Old subscribers + New viewers
- Too much old audience = no growth signal
- Too much new audience = may not convert
- Videos need to satisfy BOTH
Watch for: High quality video with great metrics BUT no discussion/comments AND low new user acquisition = penalized by algorithm
Title Rules
Proven Patterns
Fast result + tension via comparison:
- "[Result] in [Short Time] with [Method/Tool]"
- "Better than [Known Thing]" comparisons
Trending + your angle:
- When something new drops in your niche: "[New Thing] for [Your Core Topic] — First Look"
- Tie trending topic to your differentiator
Your differentiator as optimizer:
- "Why [Common Approach] Gives [Bad Result] — And How [Your Angle] Fixes It"
- "The [Your Method] for [Desired Outcome]"
- "How I Use [Your Approach] to Make [Popular Thing] Actually Work"
Niche-specific tensions that work:
- Old way vs new way
- Conventional wisdom vs reality
- What everyone does vs what actually works
- Complexity vs simplicity
- Hype vs results
Structure
- Lead with outcome, not method: "How I Produce Real Results" not "Using Method X for Result Generation"
- Create tension before explanation: "Why Your Strategy Isn't Working" not "4 Ways to Improve Your Strategy"
- Promise classification, not information: "Which Approaches Actually Work — and Which Are Hype" not "How Approaches Work"
Language
- Use "I/You" over abstract nouns: "How I Fixed This" not "Implementing Solutions for Problems"
- Plain human language for advanced ideas — explain like talking to a smart friend
- Opinion beats neutrality: "Why Popular Advice Is a Dead End" not "Advice Explained"
- Negative/contrarian framing increases curiosity: "What Everyone Misses About X" not "X is Bad"
Avoid
- Numbers reduce curiosity (lists feel complete, not intriguing)
- Abstract words kill CTR: avoid "innovation", "future", "transformation"
- Prefer concrete: "product", "money", "hype", "real"