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For YouTubers

Introduction

Likes and view counts tell you what performed, not why. Without direct feedback, you are making content decisions based on proxies and guesses. You might keep producing what the algorithm rewards while your actual audience quietly wants something different.

lumeforms gives you one structured channel to collect honest audience feedback and a multi-pass ai analysis that ranks what is most important first, so you know what to double down on and what to change. Not sure where to start? Try the free feedback audit for a tailored starting point for your channel or publication. No email or account required.

The core problem: public metrics are not the full picture

Comments and engagement rates show you surface-level reactions. They do not tell you which topics your audience actually wants more of, why viewers drop off, or what would make someone recommend you. That signal only comes from asking directly, with a structure that makes it easy to answer honestly.

lumeforms solves the analysis side, not just the collection side. You provide the context (your content, your audience, what the form is for) and lumeforms surfaces ranked themes, sentiment, and actionable insights so you know what to actually do next. Over time, acting on that signal consistently is what enables continuous growth and improvement rather than reacting to a disengaged audience after the fact.

Content Forms

Content Forms are per-piece feedback forms placed where your content lives, such as in the video description or at the end of a post. Create one for each new piece of content and use the analysis to deepen your understanding or take action on what is and is not working:

  • What worked
  • What didn't
  • Topic or video ideas
  • Rating or quick NPS
  • Census Polls

    One-time or annual audience census polls help you understand who your audience actually is so you can create content that resonates without guessing:

  • Demographics (age, sex, DOB, etc.)
  • Geographic information (country or region; stay general)
  • Context-specific information (relevant niche information)
  • Pulse Forms

    Pulse Forms are one-time expiring forms for a specific question or moment. Use these for deliberate reads rather than always-on loops:

  • Topic vote or "what should I cover next"
  • Pre-series or new format survey (before launching a series or format)
  • Preferred format (length, style, posting frequency)
  • How they found you or why they stay
  • Membership, sponsorship, or monetization feedback
  • One-time "how are we doing" or end-of-season snapshot
  • Form Engagement

    Getting your audience to actually fill out forms is worth deliberate effort. A few practices that consistently increase completion:

  • Explicitly ask at a clear moment where to find the form and thank the audience in advance
  • Bring up poll results or display them as images throughout your content
  • Thank responders or highlight anonymized insights so people feel heard
  • Asking for feedback is itself a signal

    The creators who use lumeforms are not just collecting feedback, they are signalling something about who they are. Putting a structured feedback form in your description or at the end of a post tells your audience that you take your craft seriously, that you care about their experience, and that you are intentional about improving. Most creators never do this. That gap is visible, and audiences notice it. Over time it becomes part of how people describe you to others, not just what your content covers, but the kind of creator you are.

    Conclusion

    For the step-by-step walkthrough, see the First Steps guide. For question type guidance and best practices, see Best Practices. For a free tailored audit of your feedback strategy, try the feedback audit. No email or account required.