Dentside Depot on Youtube and Instagram
My name is Aaron, I am a longtime member on Ford-Trucks. I have decided to start my own business creating content saving the best lowboy 78-79 Ford trucks that were built. I need the community's assistance to do this though. I am asking for anyone who is willing to take 30 seconds to sub to my Youtube channel, it would be greatly appreciated! I am dedicated to keeping these trucks alive and making sure the next generation wants to keep them going. Here is my stuff!
YOUTUBE LINK:
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Ford Trucks for Ford Truck Enthusiasts

Skyjacker Extended Sway Bar End Links SBE204
Part Number: SJA-SBE204$79.85
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$79.85
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Skyjacker Extended Sway Bar End Links SBE407
Part Number: SJA-SBE407$79.85
Qty. 1
$79.85
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With that said, could I be so bold as to provide some constructive criticism?
Get rid of the backing track to the videos. It's pointless and distracts from hearing what you have to say and from the project itself. I'm not sure if it's part of the social media playbook or something you just think you need to do in order to get views, but it's horrible. No reason for it. The people watching your videos are guys who want to see something interesting and meaningful being done. They might need advice, help, or in my case just something to watch after a long day. Either way, we want to see you turning wrenches, making progress, and bringing these trucks back to life. That's it. Your videos aren't being viewed by teenage girls who constantly need some type of background noise to drown their angst. Fix it, mod it, talk about why and how you did it. That's all your target audience needs. The backing track makes the video feel like a corny morning zoo radio show. You're obviously good at what you do. Put the focus on the work that you're clearly great at.
I would make some longer videos. Combine multiple projects on the same truck into one video if needed. Look at the resto/resurrection channels that have millions of views per video like Vice Grip Garage and Junkyard Digs. Their episodes are rarely less than an hour. Show your personality. Make some stupid jokes, car guy stuff if that makes sense. Most importantly, record every step of the process for the project you're spotlighting. Again, think of your target audience. Its not young ladies or Twitter addicts who need a social media dopamine drip every few hours just to function. Your audience is composed of car guys who want to see something demonstrable being done and want to know the details from start to finish. Inspiration, motivation to keep going, ideas for their own project, how to's that make life easier for guys who want to work on their own truck: Provide that for them. That's your formula in my opinion.
Keep going. There's not enough Dent content out there. You can be a great resource for guys who need it. Hope I wasn't too harsh. Again, just my opinion. Take it or leave it or feel free to call me an a**hole. Either way, best of luck and Godspeed.









