Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, we sit down with Kallaway, a systems-driven content machine who has reverse-engineered attention and scaled distribution with precision. (01:15) Kallaway breaks down his frameworks for scaling short form content and YouTube, revealing the LEGO brick approach to content creation, his team structure, and why YouTube should be treated like a professional sport. (41:15)
Kallaway is a content strategist and entrepreneur who has built one of the most efficient content machines on the internet. A former management consultant turned content expert, he has grown rapidly on YouTube by focusing on tech and AI content while developing systematic approaches to content creation. He's the founder of Sandcastles.ai and runs multiple content programs including shortform.academy.
Kallaway emphasizes that volume negates luck and strategy is commoditized once you know it. (01:14) The real sauce is being able to make one rep, then iterate off it with increasing velocity. Most people quit after 10-30 reps when they realize it takes 500+ reps to get good. The key is systematically closing unknown unknowns through relentless iteration and being able to objectively analyze your own work versus excellence in your category.
All short form content breaks down into seven components: topic, angle, hook structure (visual, spoken, text), story structure, visual format, key visuals, and audio. (33:40) The strategy is to find winning videos in your category, explode them into these seven pieces, hold the world-class elements constant, improve the weak ones, and restack into your own formation. This systematic approach removes guesswork and provides a repeatable method for content creation.
Every minute someone watches your content builds trust blocks. (13:53) Different actions require different amounts of blocks - maybe 4 blocks for email signup, 12 for a $97 product, 400 for a $10,000 product. The goal is high bingeability to stack blocks quickly. This explains why YouTube is superior to short form - one 25-minute video with 10-minute average view duration equals 20 short form videos in trust accrual.
Focus on "on-target views" rather than total views. (99:43) Dollar per view or on-target views that convert to offers is where real money comes from. Broad virality actually hurts conversion because it dilutes your audience. The algorithm needs consistent topic focus to build proper sample pools and deliver content to the right people. Pick one topic and hammer it until retirement for maximum impact.
YouTube success depends more on packaging (title/thumbnail) than content quality. (79:33) The packaging's job is to get the click, the intro confirms the expectation, and the content delivers value. Most people make the mistake of doing packaging last when they're burnt out. Treat YouTube like a professional sport - hire experts for packaging from day one rather than trying to learn everything yourself.