 Should YouTubers have a dedicated channel for every subject they want to talk about, or can they do an all-in-one? Hey there, NJRoot22.com here with a more of an insightful tech-slash-video-blogger episode today. This has to do with this channel here. I think we surpassed 100 subscribers, which was a big milestone for us. It took two years, which is ridiculous, and I think I know some of the reasons why our channel isn't getting more. Subscribers, we have fairly decent content. It's not random stuff. It's pretty well thought out. The production quality is okay. There's not a million cutscenes for the people with short attention spans. We went into this whole situation blind, so to say. I have a blog called NJRoot22.com and it's a general interest blog, even though it's based in New Jersey, Central Jersey, and talks about a lot of the local things here, but it talks about other things too that help everybody, regardless of where you live, whether it's our low-carb channel, which we do on Sundays, and we talk about supermarkets and the buying trends of the world, and we also do how-to's and other general economic news and stuff like that. So we tried to have a local zine, like a magazine. This video channel technically supports the blog. It gives our website a little multimedia. It's not just a written word and photos. There's a video as well. But to get monetized and to grow on YouTube, which can also be a good source of revenue if you get up there with many thousands of subscribers, I think I'm kind of shooting myself in the foot because everything we're reading these days says that your YouTube channel has to have a niche. What I've concluded or deduced from all this information I'm reading is that I should probably break this channel down into at least three separate channels. You got an NJRoot22 low-carb section, an NJRoot22 dot com how-to section, and NJRoot22 dot com supermarket or retail section. Because I guess if someone likes my low-carb stuff, they may not want to hear anything about my how to put together a kid's toy or something like that. So it's a little bit problematic because we have, I don't know, close to 400 videos on this channel now. I don't know if anybody here who subscribes. I don't even know what part of the channel you like. Is it just me? Am I such a great guy? Or is it the low-carb? Is it the thing that I fixed the laundry dryer? What is it? So I have no idea of why people subscribe. It's like when you have a niche channel, you know why people subscribe because they like that exact content. So this is going to be a pain. But if you're a YouTuber, you have to buy tools like there's all this SEO, marketing, keyword, planning. If I had four, three to five channels, I'd have to buy extra subscriptions and monthly service charges for these software services. And that becomes a problem because we're not making any money on this channel. So maybe I should put a Patreon link. I don't even have one. PayPal or something. I wonder if anybody has any advice here for someone who wants to be a multi-purpose vlogger because I know there are many very popular people with five million subscribers who talk about everything under the sun. Sometimes they don't talk about anything. They just film their day. Where did I go today? I guess because they're very good video editors and they have personality and they built their channel. I guess once you have a million subscribers, you could talk about anything and these subscribers will watch you. So does anybody have any advice? What should I do? Should I break it down into multiple channels or should I keep my all-in-one variety show type channel? That's it. If you have any response, please let me know in the comments and I'll see you next video.