I started a YT channel 4 months ago focusing on software founders and indie-hackers. Most videos are a behind-the-scenes tour of how I built and grew a web-app that supported me for ten years. I purposefully wanted the videos to be in production codebase rather than (potentially) contrived toy examples. This better prepares viewers for the messy realities of real-world engineering.
As for content: There's a lot of big-picture tooling videos (like integration testing your JS, having error-tracking for both in the browser and in the backend). There's also a dose of inspiration and "by-the-way" tidbits for coders with entrepreneurial ambitions (which I believe to be a great many).
The channel on YouTube is here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC17mJJnvzAa_e9qQqLIfIeQ
As for size, I'm at 2.4k subscribers between YouTube and email on-site (https://www.semicolonandsons.com/)
I started a YT channel 4 months ago focusing on software founders and indie-hackers. Most videos are a behind-the-scenes tour of how I built and grew a web-app that supported me for ten years. I purposefully wanted the videos to be in production codebase rather than (potentially) contrived toy examples. This better prepares viewers for the messy realities of real-world engineering.
As for content: There's a lot of big-picture tooling videos (like integration testing your JS, having error-tracking for both in the browser and in the backend). There's also a dose of inspiration and "by-the-way" tidbits for coders with entrepreneurial ambitions (which I believe to be a great many).
The channel on YouTube is here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC17mJJnvzAa_e9qQqLIfIeQ
As for size, I'm at 2.4k subscribers between YouTube and email on-site (https://www.semicolonandsons.com/)