A 90‑Day YouTube Content Plan That Actually Grows a UK Channel
A simple 90‑day plan: clarify your audience, pick 3 topic lanes, publish in batches, and review like a strategist (not a gambler).
A 90‑Day YouTube Content Plan That Actually Grows a UK Channel
A simple 90‑day plan: clarify your audience, pick 3 topic lanes, publish in batches, and review like a strategist (not a gambler).
Quick takeaway: Define one audience + one problem you solve
Why most “content plans” fail
People over-plan topics and under-plan execution. A 90‑day plan should be boring in a good way: repeatable formats, clear review rhythm, and enough focus to train the algorithm.
Want this fixed for you?
If you’d rather not guess, I can review your channel, show you exactly what’s limiting reach, and give you a clear next‑steps plan.
The plan (simple, repeatable)
Weeks 1–2: foundations
- One audience. One promise. One “why you”.
- Choose 3 topic lanes and write 10 video ideas per lane.
- Build a “Start here” playlist on your channel homepage.
Weeks 3–10: publish in batches
- 1 long video per week, plus 2 Shorts that point to it.
- Batch record weekly to reduce friction.
- End each video with a clear “next watch”.
Weeks 11–12: double down
- Review performance by topic lane (not by single video).
- Scale the lane that earns the best impressions → retention → subs.
Need a plan built around your channel?
I’ll map your lanes, formats, and next 12 videos.
See services →Shareable infographic
Pin it, send it to a teammate, or use it as a checklist.
FAQs
How many videos per week is realistic?
For most UK creators: one long video weekly plus 1–2 Shorts is sustainable.
Should I batch record?
Yes. Batching reduces friction and keeps quality consistent.
How do I pick topic lanes?
Choose 3 themes that your ideal viewer cares about and that you can repeat for months.
When should I change the plan?
Review weekly, change monthly. Don’t pivot after one upload.
Does consistency matter more than quality?
Quality and clarity win, but consistency helps you learn faster and build viewer habits.
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