Kenyans are curious about how Kenyan YouTubers make money on the internet. To begin monetizing videos on YouTube, several conditions must be met.
To attract viewers and subscribers, your posted material must be original and visually appealing.
Crazy Kennar is one of Kenya’s top content creators, having won three prizes at the recent Golden Awards. He has 111.1 million views and 476,000 subscribers.
His themes include houses, schools, music, and so forth. Most are based on Kenyans’ everyday hardships, and through his humour, he has become one of the country’s and the world’s funniest people.
In addition to producing content and earning money through YouTube, he runs Instant Delicacies in Juja, Kiambu and has been praised by several Kenyan celebrities.
In November 2021, the self-proclaimed content cartel’s YouTube channel achieved 100 million views.
Since joining the site in 2017, his channel had received over 121 million views as of March 2022.
Kennar began as a teacher at a local school and began generating material using a borrowed phone.
“I was missing some courses to shoot till I entered the campus,” he explained in a previous interview.
He stated that one of his followers committed suicide during his early years at the university, and he resolved to battle despair via his comedy.
Do not expect quick money as a new Kenyan YouTuber in the first few days or weeks of submitting your material. Investigate what is required to begin making that money on a social media network such as YouTube. Make certain that money is coming from sources other than YouTube.
To begin earning money on YouTube, your material must have a minimum of 4000 watching hours and at least 1000 subscribers. The more videos and views you have, the more money you will make.
YouTube is well recognized for elevating people based on the type of video they upload and what they want their audience to see from them.
Source: Pulse
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