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- Sep 14, 2020
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Hi, I’m José Pascual, a Spanish content creator. Eight months ago, after watching a podcast where a group of teenagers claimed they were making money with YT Shorts, I decided to give it a try.
I had some experience already, since I had previously created a Spanish-language finance and business channel that did fairly well (80k subscribers), but I ended up abandoning it due to work and lack of time.
So I challenged myself to see if what those teenagers were saying was actually true.
I grabbed an old channel I had with 200 subscribers and started uploading Shorts. Things picked up quickly — I hit 10 million views and qualified for monetization in around 25 days.
The RPM for Shorts in Spanish is €0.05.
I did everything myself: finding videos, writing scripts, editing, and uploading 2–3 Shorts per day.
All of this while working my full-time job as a software engineer at a Spanish company.
As the channel grew, I quickly stabilized at 50–70 million views per month, and due to the niche, I found my ceiling there.
Later on, I brought in some help to free up my time, although I still handle research and voiceover myself.
- Scriptwriter: €5/Short
- Main editor: €10/Short
After hitting a ceiling in views and realizing that RPMs were higher in other languages, I decided to invest in 3 more channels and hire translators to create content in English, German, and Portuguese.
- English RPM: €0.20
- German RPM: €0.17
- Portuguese RPM: €0.04
Translator for English, German, and Portuguese: €5/language
So a month and a half ago, I started publishing one Short per day on each channel.
I do the research, narrate the Spanish version, and then the translator uses a voice clone of me to create the translated versions.
It all sounds ideal, but after 9 months I’m now considering selling everything because I need capital for another business. The issue is, I think the YT Shorts market is terrible when it comes to exits — and I have no clue how much I could even ask for.
Here are my stats for June:
80,000,000 total views:
- Spanish: 63,000,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- English: 9,500,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- German: 2,000,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- Portuguese: 5,500,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
The translated channels are still growing slowly each month.
Another problem I have is that the profit margins aren’t enough to let me quit my job, so I’m still spending 2–3 hours a day on this, on top of my full-time job.
I constantly feel like this could all collapse at any moment.
I’m not really sure what to do.
Option A:
Make the financial effort to publish 3 Shorts per day per channel from September to January (360 Shorts/month total) and see how it performs.
Option B:
Sell everything (no idea how much to ask) and use the capital for another business.
Option C:
Try to transition into long-form, more evergreen content.
If anyone’s been through something similar, I’d love to hear how you approached it.
I had some experience already, since I had previously created a Spanish-language finance and business channel that did fairly well (80k subscribers), but I ended up abandoning it due to work and lack of time.
So I challenged myself to see if what those teenagers were saying was actually true.
I grabbed an old channel I had with 200 subscribers and started uploading Shorts. Things picked up quickly — I hit 10 million views and qualified for monetization in around 25 days.
The RPM for Shorts in Spanish is €0.05.
I did everything myself: finding videos, writing scripts, editing, and uploading 2–3 Shorts per day.
All of this while working my full-time job as a software engineer at a Spanish company.
As the channel grew, I quickly stabilized at 50–70 million views per month, and due to the niche, I found my ceiling there.
Later on, I brought in some help to free up my time, although I still handle research and voiceover myself.
- Scriptwriter: €5/Short
- Main editor: €10/Short
After hitting a ceiling in views and realizing that RPMs were higher in other languages, I decided to invest in 3 more channels and hire translators to create content in English, German, and Portuguese.
- English RPM: €0.20
- German RPM: €0.17
- Portuguese RPM: €0.04
Translator for English, German, and Portuguese: €5/language
So a month and a half ago, I started publishing one Short per day on each channel.
I do the research, narrate the Spanish version, and then the translator uses a voice clone of me to create the translated versions.

It all sounds ideal, but after 9 months I’m now considering selling everything because I need capital for another business. The issue is, I think the YT Shorts market is terrible when it comes to exits — and I have no clue how much I could even ask for.
Here are my stats for June:
80,000,000 total views:
- Spanish: 63,000,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- English: 9,500,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- German: 2,000,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
- Portuguese: 5,500,000 views publishing 30 Shorts
The translated channels are still growing slowly each month.
Another problem I have is that the profit margins aren’t enough to let me quit my job, so I’m still spending 2–3 hours a day on this, on top of my full-time job.
I constantly feel like this could all collapse at any moment.
I’m not really sure what to do.
Option A:
Make the financial effort to publish 3 Shorts per day per channel from September to January (360 Shorts/month total) and see how it performs.
Option B:
Sell everything (no idea how much to ask) and use the capital for another business.
Option C:
Try to transition into long-form, more evergreen content.
If anyone’s been through something similar, I’d love to hear how you approached it.