- Joined
- Mar 13, 2017
- Messages
- 26,514
- Reaction score
- 5,765
I have never seen her videos before but she revealed she makes six figures a month off her youtube ad revenue, YouTube has probably made more millionaires than any other company.
I know those prankers also are millionaires like Vitaly and UFC even brought some youtube pranker to speak at the UFC fighters retreat, he makes over 12 million a year from youtube ads similar to the paul bros.
How does one get the traffic though do you just post up videos and people view them? or do you have to network and post them on different sites?
This is her Channel.
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheKarinaBear/videos
An online vlogger, who specialises in DIY slime videos, has revealed she is making up to six figures a month in revenue from advertising.
Karina Garcia boasts 6.7 million subscribers on Youtube and uploads three craft videos a week, each around 10 minutes long.
What started as a hobby for Garcia has now evolved into a lucrative career with the 23-year-old revealing to CNBC that she makes up to six figures a month in revenue from advertisers using her slime videos to reach an audience.
Her near-overnight success continues to astound those around Garcia, but she says creating craft videos was simply a way to pass the time at first.
"I recently bought a house (from slime money), and my mum laughs about it," Garcia told the US network.
"I had nothing going for me. I didn't have a job. I didn't go to school. I was the laziest person ever."
One video Garcia uploaded a month ago, titled "DIY GIANT FLUFFY SLIME STRESS BALL!" has accumulated more than 16 million views since it was uploaded 11 months ago.
Garcia's popularity has proved to be so financially secure that Target approached the Californian blogger for her own product deal, a series of DIY slime craft kits for teenage girls.
It seems her fun approach to slime (a non-sticky concoction of glue, salt, food dye and shaving cream) is doing more than just entertaining her audience.
"Watching you make slime is so satisfying and relaxing," wrote one fan.
"I have no idea why but I can’t stop watching these slime videos, I don't even make them myself at home!" wrote another.
As part of their video monetisation program, YouTube allows certain popular channels to reap a dividend from the video videos they accumulate.
The exact amount differs depending on the marketability of the YouTube talent, but one source says that in 2013 YouTube was paying $7.60 per 1000 views. That would earn a blockbuster online video like "Charlie Bit My Finger" with 5.6 million views around $42,000.
As astonishing as Garcia's success is, her story in turning a novel hobby into a social media empire is not a new one.
Late last month the Australian Financial Review revealed that Kayla Istines, a personal trainer that uploads transformation pictures to Instagram, had amassed $63 million as a result of her popularity.
Itsines is currently the 4th richest Australian woman under 40, and has sold millions of copies of her personalised workout program the "Bikini Body Guide" to fans around the world.
https://finance.nine.com.au/2017/11...me-girl-reveals-she-makes-six-figures-a-month
I know those prankers also are millionaires like Vitaly and UFC even brought some youtube pranker to speak at the UFC fighters retreat, he makes over 12 million a year from youtube ads similar to the paul bros.
How does one get the traffic though do you just post up videos and people view them? or do you have to network and post them on different sites?
This is her Channel.
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheKarinaBear/videos
An online vlogger, who specialises in DIY slime videos, has revealed she is making up to six figures a month in revenue from advertising.
Karina Garcia boasts 6.7 million subscribers on Youtube and uploads three craft videos a week, each around 10 minutes long.
What started as a hobby for Garcia has now evolved into a lucrative career with the 23-year-old revealing to CNBC that she makes up to six figures a month in revenue from advertisers using her slime videos to reach an audience.
Her near-overnight success continues to astound those around Garcia, but she says creating craft videos was simply a way to pass the time at first.
"I recently bought a house (from slime money), and my mum laughs about it," Garcia told the US network.
"I had nothing going for me. I didn't have a job. I didn't go to school. I was the laziest person ever."
One video Garcia uploaded a month ago, titled "DIY GIANT FLUFFY SLIME STRESS BALL!" has accumulated more than 16 million views since it was uploaded 11 months ago.
Garcia's popularity has proved to be so financially secure that Target approached the Californian blogger for her own product deal, a series of DIY slime craft kits for teenage girls.
It seems her fun approach to slime (a non-sticky concoction of glue, salt, food dye and shaving cream) is doing more than just entertaining her audience.
"Watching you make slime is so satisfying and relaxing," wrote one fan.
"I have no idea why but I can’t stop watching these slime videos, I don't even make them myself at home!" wrote another.
As part of their video monetisation program, YouTube allows certain popular channels to reap a dividend from the video videos they accumulate.
The exact amount differs depending on the marketability of the YouTube talent, but one source says that in 2013 YouTube was paying $7.60 per 1000 views. That would earn a blockbuster online video like "Charlie Bit My Finger" with 5.6 million views around $42,000.
As astonishing as Garcia's success is, her story in turning a novel hobby into a social media empire is not a new one.
Late last month the Australian Financial Review revealed that Kayla Istines, a personal trainer that uploads transformation pictures to Instagram, had amassed $63 million as a result of her popularity.
Itsines is currently the 4th richest Australian woman under 40, and has sold millions of copies of her personalised workout program the "Bikini Body Guide" to fans around the world.
https://finance.nine.com.au/2017/11...me-girl-reveals-she-makes-six-figures-a-month