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Tài liệuTubeMator AIChannel Analytics — User Guide

Channel Analytics — User Guide

Get a clear picture of how your YouTube channel is performing — all in one place, without opening YouTube Studio.


What is Channel Analytics?

Channel Analytics is your channel's "health dashboard" inside TubeMator AI. It shows you the most important numbers about your channel — views, watch time, revenue, who's watching, where they come from, and which videos are doing best — in a clean, easy-to-read layout.

Why use it?

  • See everything at a glance — no need to switch between tools or tabs.
  • Spot what's working — quickly find your top videos and best traffic sources.
  • Understand your audience — know their age, gender, country, and whether they're subscribers.
  • Make better decisions — use real numbers to plan your next videos.

What You'll See on the Page

When you open the Analytics tab inside a channel, here's what's on screen, from top to bottom:

1. Channel Health Card (top)

A quick score (out of 100) that tells you how healthy your channel is right now. It highlights things like uploads, subscribers, watch time, and pipeline status — and warns you if something needs attention (for example, "154 items stuck in Ideas").

2. Summary Cards

Six big number cards showing the key stats for the time period you picked:

  • Views — how many times your videos were watched
  • Watch Time — total hours people spent watching
  • AVD (Average View Duration) — how long people watch on average
  • Subscribers — net change (gained minus lost)
  • Revenue — estimated earnings in USD
  • RPM — revenue per 1,000 views

Each card also shows a small percentage (like +36%) comparing to the previous period — green means up, red means down.

3. Views & Revenue Chart

A line chart showing how your views (and revenue, if you toggle it on) changed day by day. Hover over any point to see the exact number for that date.

4. Top 10 Videos (by Views)

A list of your best-performing videos in the selected period. For each video you see the thumbnail, title, views, AVD, and revenue. Click the small arrow on the right to open the video on YouTube.

5. Traffic Sources

Where your viewers are coming from — YouTube Search, Suggested Videos, External sites, Channel Page, Subscribers, Shorts Feed, and more. Each source shows total views and the percentage of your total traffic.

6. Viewer Type

A simple split between Subscribers and Non-subscribers — so you can see how much of your reach comes from new audiences vs your existing fans.

7. Top Countries

The countries your viewers are watching from, ranked by views.

8. Audience Age Groups & Gender Split

Bars showing the age ranges of your viewers (18–24, 25–34, 35–44, 45–54, etc.) and the male/female split.


Step-by-Step: How to Use It

Open Channel Analytics

  1. Go to Channels in the left sidebar.
  2. Click the channel you want to check.
  3. Click the Analytics tab at the top of the channel page.

Change the Time Period

  1. Look at the top-right of the Analytics section — you'll see a dropdown (default: Last 28 days).
  2. Click it to choose another range: Last 7 days, Last 28 days, Last 90 days, Lifetime, or Custom range.
  3. The whole page updates automatically with numbers for the period you picked.
Tip: If you choose Custom range, two date pickers appear — pick a start and end date.

Refresh the Data

  • The page shows a small cached badge when you're looking at saved data (this loads fast and saves resources).
  • Click the Refresh button (top-right) to pull the latest numbers from YouTube.
  • You can refresh up to a limited number of times per day to protect the connection — if you've used them all, just wait until tomorrow.

Compare Views and Revenue

  1. In the chart area, click the Revenue ($) toggle next to Views.
  2. Both lines appear on the same chart so you can see how earnings track with views.

Open a Top Video on YouTube

  1. Scroll to the Top 10 Videos list.
  2. Click the small arrow icon on the far right of any row.
  3. The video opens in a new tab on YouTube.

Read Traffic Sources

  • The longer the colored bar, the more views from that source.
  • Use this to learn what's working: lots of YouTube Search traffic? Your titles and tags are doing their job. Lots of Suggested Videos? YouTube is recommending you well.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Check weekly, not daily. Daily numbers jump around a lot — looking at the Last 7 days or Last 28 days view gives a clearer picture of real trends.
  • Watch the % change. A big green or red number next to a stat is more important than the stat itself. It tells you if things are getting better or worse.
  • Use Top 10 Videos to plan content. If a video is doing well, make a follow-up or a similar topic. Repeat what works.
  • Pay attention to AVD (Average View Duration). Higher AVD means YouTube will recommend your videos more. If AVD is dropping, your hooks or pacing may need work.
  • Non-subscriber views = growth. A high non-subscriber percentage means YouTube is showing your videos to new people — great for growing the channel.
  • Match content to your audience. If most viewers are 25–34 and from Vietnam, make sure your topics, language, and style fit them.
  • Don't refresh constantly. The cached data is updated regularly. Only refresh when you really need the very latest number.

Common Questions

Why does my Analytics tab show "cached"? To save time and resources, TubeMator AI stores recent analytics data and shows it instantly. Click Refresh if you want the very latest numbers from YouTube.

Why are some numbers different from YouTube Studio? YouTube updates analytics with a small delay (sometimes up to 48 hours). Numbers in TubeMator AI follow the same delay. They'll match YouTube Studio once both are fully updated.

My new video isn't showing in the Top 10. Why? The Top 10 list ranks by views in the selected period. New videos usually need a few days to gather enough views to appear. Try switching to Last 7 days to see recent performance.

I see a negative subscriber number — is that bad? Not necessarily. The number shows net change (gained minus lost). Some loss is normal. Worry only if losses are much higher than gains over several weeks.

Why is my Revenue showing $0? Revenue only appears if your channel is monetized on YouTube and the data has been reported. If you're newly monetized, it can take a few days to show up.

What does RPM mean? RPM = Revenue Per Mille = how much you earn for every 1,000 views. It's a quick way to see how well your channel monetizes compared to others.

Can I see analytics for private or unlisted videos? Analytics focus on public videos, since those are the ones generating reach and revenue.

Can I export this data? Right now, Analytics is for viewing inside TubeMator AI. For deeper exports, use YouTube Studio directly.

The page won't load my data. What do I do?

  1. Make sure your YouTube channel is still connected (check the YouTube tab in channel settings).
  2. Click Refresh once.
  3. If it still fails, wait a few minutes and try again — YouTube's API sometimes hits temporary limits.

Need help with another feature? Check the rest of the TubeMator AI docs or contact support from the bottom of the sidebar.