Welcome to YouTube Millionaires, where we profile channels that have recently crossed the one million subscriber mark. There are channels crossing this threshold every week, and each creator has a story to tell about YouTube success. Read previous installments here.
This installment of YouTube Millionaires is brought to you by creator fintech company Karat Financial.
SoaR Milo is a master of disguise.
In his five years on YouTube, he’s gathered there’s one big thing that drives his channel growth: making trendy, algorithm-attention-grabbing videos. The way he sees it, if a video pops off, there’s probably an algorithmic reason–and therefore an algorithmic reason to make more like it.
Over the past year, what’s been working for him is a good old imitation game. He fires up Fortnite and metamorphoses into someone else. He’s been The Rock, a fake Epic Games employee, a noob, Ninja, Lazarbeam, Lachlan, and, crucially, MrBeast.
We say crucially because emulating the famously generous burger baron involved Milo giving real donations to his unsuspecting “victims.” And that set off a whole new spate of content for him. These past few months, he’s followed in MrBeast’s footsteps, tapping fellow Fortnite players to take part in challenges and rewarding them with cash.
For Milo, these MrBeast-y videos are part of figuring out how he can use his channel to do good. YouTube changed his life–now he wants to use it to change others’.
Check out our chat with him below.
Milo: It’s literally a dream come true. When I saw my subscriber count hit one million, I felt a sense of accomplishment and affirmation. I was happy, but I’m not done, so more than anything, I just felt really appreciative of the journey. I owe it to my subscribers for changing my life.
Milo: I’m kind of a boring person, actually. I’m from a really small town in Washington with a population of 9,000 people where there is nothing to do, so I spend most of my time gaming and watching YouTube. Before YouTube, I was just a normal kid going to school. Tried out some sports but nothing really had my attention like YouTube and gaming did. I’ve been making videos since I was a freshman in high school, but never saw any real success until my first year of college.
Milo: I’ve been interested in gaming ever since I could remember. My first console was a GameCube! I enjoy games that are multiplayer because I’m a competitive person. I don’t like story mode-type games. I played Call of Duty multiplayer for years until Fortnite came out in 2017. Fortnite was a new approach at multiplayer gaming. The battle royale concept changed gaming forever. Being a competitive person and winning a game with 99 other players was the best feeling. I was hooked.
Milo: SoaR is a gaming organization I have known about since I started playing Call of Duty back in 2012-13. The whole sniping and trickshotting thing has always interested me, but I was not good at it back in the day. Fast-forward six or seven years and I started gaining a little momentum on YouTube.
SoaR was always a goal for me when I was young, so funny enough, I kind of just sent a private DM to SoaR management asking to join, and they gave me a shot. They signed me and helped my channel monetarily. They kind of invested in me. So now that I have over one million subscribers, the relationship between SoaR and I is mutually beneficial in many ways. That’s family.
Milo: My time on Fortnite varies a lot. Some days I’ll spend four to six hours on the game recording or building maps. Other times I’ll go days without playing Fortnite. But every day is a work day for me. I typically spend my mornings planning and ideating. Most of the work is actually pre-production and post-production.
When I’m not doing YouTube stuff, I’m either eating, showering, or hanging out with family. I do not give myself much time to enjoy other things. But I enjoy YouTube, so I guess I spend most of my time doing what I enjoy. Remember, I spent like five years making YouTube videos and did not make a single dollar, so you know I enjoyed it.
Milo: I don’t really have a favorite part, but if I had to choose just one, I think my favorite part about YouTube is that I have an opportunity to truly impact lives in a positive way. I’m still trying to figure out how to do that, though.
Milo: My approach to coming up with ideas has changed over time. I started with making videos I thought were cool, but that did not work. If you want to grow on YouTube, you need to make trendy and algorithm-optimized videos. So most of the time I land on making a video that I think will perform well. I would love to take suggestions from commenters, but most of the time the algorithm knows what the viewer wants to watch more than the viewer knows what they want to watch.
Milo: I think the #1 most important thing when it comes to growing a channel is doing trendy things, but doing it in a way that is different and better.
Milo: My plan is to keep growing my YouTube presence, and keep doing what I enjoy. Two years ago, I could have never predicted what my life is like now, so five years from now, I don’t know. I just hope I’m still doing something to improve my life and the lives of those around me. Things happen so fast—for now I’m just focused on the next video, and the next, and the next.
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