I do live streams on household life hacks and all sorts of "do-it-yourself" stuff, sometimes I show how to disassemble an old coffee grinder or clean the filter in a washing machine. In general, I have the same problem as you. When I first started, no one watched the streams at all. Even my mother once said: "Why are you sitting and talking to yourself for an hour?" In general, I also started looking for options and came across this same SMM-World. I decided to try youtube live views buy, because the prices were, to put it mildly, not scary. I took live-traffic, they write there: "Live views", plus there was a checkbox "natural feed", or something like that, now I can't remember word for word. The stream was about replacing a heating element in a boiler - a fairly popular topic, especially in the summer, when everything breaks down. And here's what's surprising: during the first 10 minutes, the views started to grow, not sharply, but smoothly. At some point, I almost believed that someone actually found me through a search. At the 30th minute, two real questions appeared in the chat - I immediately realized that these people were not "winding up", because the questions were to the point, and one even sent a photo of how everything was rusty for him 😄 After that, I held two more streams with support from SMM-World, and, honestly, each time it helped at least a little. The YouTube algorithm still reacts to activity in the first minutes of the broadcast, and even if you bought YouTube views cheaply, but they come "smartly" - it works.
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It's interesting to read about such experience, especially about how it affects algorithms. I'm also thinking about testing such a method for a channel with electronics reviews. For now I'm just observing, but the topic is worthwhile.