🚀 I Cracked the YouTube Shorts Formula (For DevOps Content)
A few days ago, I posted a simple DevOps short.
No fancy editing.
No viral trend.
No clickbait.
Just a technical observation that engineers could instantly relate to.
The Result 👇
📈 4.5K views in under 4 hours
❤️ 2.1K likes
🔥 98.7% average percentage viewed
🏆 Ranked #1 out of my last 10 videos
For a niche DevOps creator, these numbers were a pleasant surprise.
What Was the Video?
The short was based on a simple concept:
A relatable engineering moment.
Every developer, DevOps engineer, and SRE has experienced that feeling:
- Hours of debugging
- Looking everywhere
- Blaming Kubernetes
- Blaming AWS
- Blaming Terraform
- Then discovering a missing character or tiny typo
The joke lands because it's painfully true.
What I Learned
1. Relatability Beats Complexity
Engineers don't always share highly technical content.
They share experiences.
A 10-second story that makes someone say:
"Yep, that happened to me."
often performs better than a deep technical explanation.
A Surprising Observation
One thing I noticed:
The more technical I make a video, the smaller the audience becomes.
The more relatable I make it, the more engineers engage.
And nothing connects engineers faster than:
"Wait... you did that too?"
Question for Fellow Engineers
What's the most painful bug or production mistake you've ever spent hours debugging only to discover it was caused by something ridiculously small?
I need ideas for the next DevOps short 😄
❤️ If you found this helpful do visit 😉
My YouTube channel.
🔗 Linktree Profile: https://linktr.ee/DevOps_Descent
💻 GitHub: https://github.com/devopsdescent

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