Skip to main content

Course Review: YouTube for Bosses - Sunny Lenarduzzi. How to grow your YouTube Channel into a Business

YouTube for Bosses Free Mug... 
or the most expensive mug 
you'll ever buy?
I've been subscribed to Sunny Lenarduzzi's YouTube channel for a few years, learning a lot on how to grow a following on sites like YouTube and Instagram.

If you have any interest in growing your own YouTube channel I'd highly recommend watching some of Sunny's videos on the subject. 

Definitely explore her 2019 back catalogue for the most useful information. This year she's been on a bit of a 'being authentic' pivot that, personally, doesn't resonate all that much with me (but probably speaks volumes to anyone with similar experience). I'm not saying she shouldn't or isn't being authentic, it's just I didn't subscribe to hear stories about her life journey.

To get back on track, Sunny runs a successful online business with her flagship course, YouTube for Bosses, a stand alone paid course that does act as something of a gateway to further paid (but optional) coaching with Sunny and her team.

Full disclosure, this post is not sponsored, nor am I an affiliate (though I would be if Sunny had an affiliate program).

YouTube for Bosses normally retails for USD$597.00 but if you keep an eye on Sunny's YouTube channel and other social media she periodically hosts free online course webinars in which you can sign up to the course for $397.00 and get a 'free' Be Your Own Boss mug (that's mine in the main image) if you sign up before the end of the webinar. I signed up in March of 2020 - a little before everything went off the rails with COVID-19.

I have two YouTube Channels, one since 2006. Neither have reached 1000 subscribers. While I haven't really tried to turn either into a business, I have been actively trying to grow them for the past couple of years with very little success. 

While Sunny's YouTube channel has a lot of good information, it's not a step by step guide to anything. It's kind of a greatest hits of Sunny's knowledge, jumping around from topic to topic based on the Youtube algorithm and what works, statistically, with her audience - which is basically the 'Sunny System' in action.

Even though Sunny also has a free YouTube Course it still only scratches the surface of building a successful YouTube business. 

YouTube for Bosses takes you through every stage of building a YouTube business from researching potential content and making videos to creating an opt-in and building your email list.

It is not an insignificant course in terms of either content or the time you'll need to not just work your way through, but also absorb and understand all the steps. That said, there's no padding here. Everything is essential and to the point.

For me the real value of the course, and what I found to be most impressive, is phase 1 of the process,  content research and analysis. If you've ever struggled with ideas of what to make videos about, or feel you've already covered every topic in your niche, Sunny's research method will generate a list of new ideas extremely quickly. Honestly, it's the best idea generator I've come across.

More time consuming is analysing all the ideas to see which are most likely to gain traction in YouTube's algorithm.

Phase 1 is the foundation of why YouTube for Bosses is a proven system for success. Phases 2-4 cover creating your videos, optimizing them for Youtube search, and building an email list.

I won't go over phases 2-4. The information in them is solid but more production based. You need to learn it but you could learn it from any similar YouTube course. The most value and what sets this course apart from others is in the first phase.

I really struggled with Phase 1, not because it's difficult, though it does take a good deal of focus to really absorb the process, but because Sunny really likes organising everything in spreadsheets. Which is not complicated in itself but once you start filling up a spreadsheet with a lot of text it starts to become overwhelming.

Combine that with multiple, lengthy checklists for every phase and you really wonder how you're going to remember all this and what checklist you're on etc.

Sunny does assure us that we'll come to really enjoy the research phase but yeah... nah (as us Aussies tend to say). I've been through every stage of the course twice since I signed up. Still not liking those spreadsheets.

To be fair, Sunny does say you can use other methods, apps, to organize your research and other course information, even suggesting alternatives, but doesn't really give any tips for how to do that.

I'm kind of stuck there at the moment. I need to find a better way to organise the research so I won't feel like it all looks too hard.

If I had any suggestions for Sunny, I'd really like to see a version of the course better suited to visual thinkers, paired back a little, with fewer checklists. Spreadsheets are fine but they were invented for numbers not massive lists of text. (This is coming from someone who is used to reading and writing lots of text - can you tell from this post?).

The course is supported by an student only Facebook group where you can ask questions and post links to your videos on dedicated posts. While intended to be supportive, posting videos to the group can be a little problematic in that it can give you a sudden hit of views, and sometimes subscribers. Initially that sounds like a good thing but it can mess with your YouTube stats by making your Facebook posted video look like it was more popular than other videos with your audience.

As an example, my channel introduction video, that I created and posted to the Facebook group, as part of the YouTube for Bosses course, had a third more views and quite a bit more comment engagement from people in the course than any video posted to my channel (but not to the Facebook group) since.

Overall I think YouTube for Bosses is good value if you're serious about turning your YouTube channel into a business. I do feel it's better suited to people who want to sell online services, courses, or other digital products but the skills learned are transferable to almost any kind of YouTube channel if your main focus is audience building.

Sunny Lenarduzzi
Sunny Lenarduzzi
As I said, it's not an insignificant course in terms of time and content. Some of the video lessons are up to an hour long. I'd recommend setting aside at least a couple of hours a day to give you time to watch each video lesson and too apply what you've learned.

If you really wanted to you could power through the whole course in a week but I don't think you'd take it all in. I'm still going back and redoing parts of lessons, just to remember what they were about. It really is a lot to take in.

If you're not sure about spending so much on a course then I highly recommend Sunny's free YouTube Course just to get an idea of what to expect (and you may even get that discount for YouTube for Bosses with a free mug).

Sunny does know her stuff. You just have to do the work.

Comments

  1. Thanks David. I have been subscribed to Sunny the last 2 years also. I think she gives sound advice and genuinely wants to help people improve their channels. Maybe one day I'll have the extra money to invest in her program.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, she really does give some good advice, even in her free videos. I would recommend making four or five videos on whatever subject you plan to base a YouTube channel around before spending quite this much on a paid course.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Comments are moderated by an actual human (me, TET) and may not publish right away. I do read all comments and only reject those not directly related to the post or are spam/scams (I'm looking at you Illuminati recruiters... I mean scammers. Stop commenting on my Illuminati post!).

Buy Gifts and Apparel featuring art by TET.

Popular posts from this blog

Movie Review: Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) *No Spoilers*

T his is another film that I would have liked to have seen in a theatre but, for whatever reason, didn't get to. Having now seen  Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga  (2024) almost a year later I'm glad I didn't. Which is not to say it's bad. Like its predecessor Mad Max: Fury Road (2015), which I enjoyed in a cinema immensely, this film would definitely benefit from being on a big screen for the spectacle and epic visuals of it all.  However unlike its predecessor there is so much going on, with back and forth between the waring parties, and Furiosa's story as well, you can't just sit back and kind of enjoy the ride. It's like writer/director, George Miller, wanted to cram in as many of his ideas as possible for the post apocalyptic world of Mad Max, because it's not likely he'll make another one, but whoever does, has a rich, detailed world of on screen source material to draw upon. The story begins with young Furiosa (Alyla Browne) and her journey from the ...

I'm Confused About Why People Prefer to Say Discombobulated?

D iscombobulated. Is a word that I think someone rediscovered about three or four years ago (maybe more because the pandemic years have thrown out my sense of time) and now I hear it a lot. It's not a new word by any means, but when I started hearing multiple celebrities using it in everyday sentences, I actively had to look up what it meant. Define it with as many synonyms as you like but essentially it's just another word meaning 'confused'. Seinfeld Quotes: Quotes.net The words are pretty much interchangeable. He was discombobulated by too many choices. He was confused by too many choices.  My confusion is the length of the word. It's unnecessarily long with too many syllables. There are many other words that mean confused, and therefore also mean discombobulated. Most of them are shorter and easier to say. So why not just say 'confused'? Perhaps discombobulated sounds more intelligent, maybe?  Hawaii Five-0 Quotes: Quotes.net I've noticed it gets us...

Movie Review: Thunderbolts* (2025) *No Spoilers*

G oing into  Thunderbolts*  I was a tiny bit concerned that not seeing the previous Marvel Movie, Captain America: Brave New World , might be a problem. Fortunately, if you've seen the trailer to that film, you mostly have all you need to understand the brief references to it here. The bigger issue you may bump up against is not really knowing who any of this team is, if you haven't been watching every Marvel movie or TV series. The movie is counting on you at least knowing who Yolena (Florence Pugh), Bucky (Sebastian Stan), and Red Guardian (David Harbour) is to draw you into seeing the film. It is kind of a better experience if you know who John Walker - Captain America Lite (Wyatt Russell), Ava Starr - Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen), and Antonia Dreykov - Task Master (Olga Kurylenko) are but there is enough backstory given, to at least place them in context of the wider MCU as misfits. Having said that, the story really lends itself to filling in the backstory on almost all...

Second Sunday Skateboard Session Episode 3, 4, and 5 - Definitely Seeing Progress

TET, Episode 5 Heelflip attempt. C ontinuing my ten part series of Second Sunday Skateboard sessions , the series where I'm attempting to master all seven basic skateboarding tricks in Braille Skateboarding's Skateboarding Made Simple Volume One , over twenty weeks (or ten fortnights).  Each episode is a short Sunday check in to show where I'm at after each two week period of practicing. Generally I aim for at least an hour practice session every second day if weather or my work schedule permits. These are the links to Episode One and Episode Two  should you feel the need to see where I started.  I'm not a complete newbie, having been a relatively hardcore skater through the late eighties and early nineties, however I was mostly a mini ramp and curb skater, and never really maintained my skills beyond riding and ollies.  The explosion of council built concrete parks came a decade too late for me to maintain my mini ramp skills. Once we closed our own skate park in ...

Australian Federal Election 2025 - World's Most Boring Government Re-elected by Landside - We're Even More Fine!

Anthony Albanese Victory by ChatGPT and TET. W hen I started writing about the 2025 Federal election the polls were suggesting the world's most boring government was crusing to a defeat . As it turns out, boring is good, and Australia wants more of it, handing the current government a landslide win with a majority vote. Anthony Albanese became the first PM since John Howard to win a consecutive term, and the first Labor PM since Bob Hawke to do so. Some of that comes down to the leadership revolving door both major parties had through the mid 2000s. Although Anthony is my preferred PM over Dutton the irony is Dutton sounds more like a leader with a fairly commanding voice and an ability to speak well, without sounding like he's waffling and dodging questions, even if he is. Anthony, on the other hand, does have the ability (and speech writer) to say a lot of inspiring things but it gets lost in the delivery. He doesn't seem to know when to emphasise a point for effect. In h...

Australian Federal Election 2025 - Highlighting Some Minor Parties and Independents

W hile I am all for voting for minor parties and independent candidates, it can be concerning if too many of them win their seats. When independents hold the balance of power it gives them a lot of leverage to get their own policy ideas inserted into the mix. This is not necessarily a good or bad thing but it can slow everything down, and even sabotage policies and promises, that the government won the election with. It requires the government to work harder, and possibly make compromises, to get their policies implemented. Essentially they do what Australian pollical legend, and founder of The Australian Democrats, Senator Don Chipp, expounded in such simple terms, "keep the bastards honest." While I can't list and write about every independent and minor party candidate I can highlight a few, who already hold seats in parliament, and will no doubt be looking to hold onto them in 2025. The Conservatives Bob Katter - Katter's Australian Party There's a joke in the ...

TV Series Review: Star Wars: Andor - Season 2 (2025, Disney+) *No Spoilers*

D isney+'s Star Wars: Andor  the first season is widely regarded as some of the best Star Wars since the original trilogy, and I don't disagree in my  Andor Season 1  review. Despite that, it does have its problems, mainly a lot of space between action pieces. That's not to say nothing is happening in those spaces, but I do remember being frustrated how long season one took to get to a promised heist scene, going from conversation to conversation over several episodes. However, when Andor does have action, it usually delivers, with action that serves the story rather than action because 'it's time for some action now'. Unfortunately that gave Andor the reputation for being Star Wars 'for grown ups'. People who understand how tension and intrigue can come just as much from character interaction, who is talking to who, and what they're saying. That lead to low viewership and the show's proposed number of seasons being reduced to just two (I believe...