Got an advice for a vtuber wanting to reach affiliate?
I got to affiliate by 1. asking friends to lurk 2. holding myself to a consistent stream schedule and 3. putting effort into posting content outside of twitch
When I was starting out I asked some of my IRL friends to lurk my stream in a tab even if they weren't watching.
I would never recommend pressuring ppl to actively watch a stream as that is a big overstep, but asking some buds to just keep the tab open somewhere as a favor to get over that initial 3 average hurdle is reasonable.
Once I got affiliate I thanked my friends for their support and told them they didn't have to keep my tab open anymore, but some of them ended up enjoying the content enough that they still come to my streams regularly, and a couple even became mods for me!
Aside from that, I relied heavily on building an audience on TikTok and Twitter and converting them to my Twitch to build my stream community. Twitch discoverability is trash, so getting your content out to other platforms is super important and the earlier you start the better.
I started off with a philosophy of spending 3x the amount of time I spent actually streaming on Twitch each week into making content off the site and improving my streams. I set an expectation of myself that every Wednesday was my stream day and that I would treat it as if it were a job, only canceling or moving if absolutely necessary. I streamed once a week, then watched my own stream back to make clips, made 2 edited clips for TikTok, and any time left went to making the stream more interactive, like new channel point redeems, or just general improvements and planning content. Now that I have a bigger audience base I stream more and edit less, but it was crucial to my initial growth.
I also heavily watched my analytics across all platforms to see what content was performing best and leaned heavier into that. Higher CCV during art streams than games? I pivoted to creative content. Art posts flopped on TikTok? Focused on interactive stream clips instead. Twitter audience was made primarily of other vtubers rather than viewers? I put out tutorial content and focused on showcasing my rigging abilities to build my reputation in the vtubing scene.
Content isn't one size fits all across platforms, and by finding your strengths and doubling down on them you can find ways to grow and stand out from the crowd!