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Channel audit · @Sierra_sp

@Sierra_sp YouTube Channel Audit: 1,680 Subs Across 286 Videos

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@Sierra_sp sits at 1,680 subscribers with 286 uploads and 890,933 lifetime views — roughly 3,115 views per video averaged across the channel's history. That's a high upload count for the sub total, suggesting a long-running Spanish-language channel that hasn't converted volume into compounding subscriber growth.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@Sierra_sp
Subscribers
1,680
Videos
286
Country
Spain

Mi ordenador de la nasa no me permite hacer videos con más de 2 fps 😎 (Sucribete lo necesito ) Canal secundario: https://youtube.com/@alvdejaimorra?si=U9sBxqE7yBoko03t

Here's the headline number that jumped out reading this channel cold: @Sierra_sp has uploaded 286 videos to earn 1,680 subscribers. That's about 5.9 subs per video over the channel's lifetime, which is on the low end for any niche, in any language. The 890,933 total views average out to roughly 3,115 views per video — a respectable middle-of-the-pack number for a Spanish-language creator, but with no clear breakout hit visible in the public data to lift that average.

The thing I can't fully diagnose from outside: the last 30 long-form uploads in the data pull show 0 views, and the titles came through blank in the scrape. That could mean two very different things. Either I caught the channel mid-upload-batch and YouTube's public counter hadn't refreshed, or there's a genuine distribution problem where recent videos aren't getting served. Worth checking the actual upload dates in YouTube Studio before reading too much into it. If those are 24-hour-old uploads, ignore the zero. If they're 2+ weeks old and still under 10 views each, that's a real flag.

The channel description is honest in a way that's both charming and a little revealing from a growth standpoint. The 'my NASA computer doesn't let me make videos with more than 2 fps' joke (in Spanish) suggests a creator aware of their production constraints — which is self-aware in a likable way, but also signals limited gear or compute. The 'subscribe, I need it' line is self-deprecating in a way that works for some audiences, but 286 videos in, that desperation joke lands differently than it would at 20 videos. New viewers reading the about page get a tone that says 'I've been at this a while and it hasn't worked.' Hard to recover from on a first impression.

Content mix in the recent batch is interesting: 30 long-form, 0 Shorts. For a Spanish-language channel at 1,680 subs in 2026, Shorts are usually the fastest discovery vector available. Long-form needs either an existing audience or strong search demand to break through. If Sierra_sp has been long-form-only for a stretch, that's a choice — but it's a choice that's competing against Shorts-fed creators pulling discovery from a much larger funnel. Spanish-language Shorts in particular still have lighter competition than the English-language Shorts feed, so the upside is real if the creator wanted to test it.

The secondary channel reference (linking to @alvdejaimorra) changes how you read all of this. If @Sierra_sp is a side channel or experimental project, 286 uploads to 1,680 subs isn't a failure — it's just what side channels look like. If it's the main brand, the diagnosis sharpens considerably. The public data doesn't tell us which, so any prescription has to fork.

Lifetime view-per-video of ~3,115 isn't bad in isolation. It means the back catalog has done some work over time, probably through search and suggested. The question I'd want to answer next is whether new uploads are pulling those numbers or whether the lifetime average is propped up by 5-10 older videos that hit long-tail search years ago. Without titles or view counts on the recent batch, I'm flying blind on that — which is the single piece of analysis I'd most want to do.

One thing worth flagging if the creator reads this: the gap between 286 uploads and 1,680 subscribers is the loudest signal in the data. It says volume isn't the bottleneck. Whatever the next move is, it's not 'upload more.' It's either positioning (clearer niche signals on thumbnails), packaging (sharper hooks in the first 15 seconds), or distribution (Shorts as a feeder). My instinct from outside would be to A/B test thumbnails on the next 5 uploads and watch CTR — but I can't see current CTR, so that's a soft suggestion, not a hard call.

If I were sitting next to this creator going through Studio, the first question I'd ask is what average view duration looks like on the recent batch. Under 30% means the upload-more strategy has been masking a retention problem the whole time. Over 50% means it's purely a click problem — the videos hold viewers, they just aren't earning the click. Different problems, different fixes, and you can't tell which one this channel has from the outside.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @Sierra_sp have on YouTube?

@Sierra_sp currently sits at 1,680 subscribers. The channel has uploaded 286 videos to earn that count, which works out to roughly 5.9 subscribers per video over the channel's lifetime. For context, that's on the lower end of typical conversion ratios — most actively growing channels in the long-form Spanish-language space land in the 15-50 subs per video range during real growth phases. The 1,680 sub count combined with 890,933 lifetime views suggests a channel that's been active long enough to accumulate traffic but hasn't hit a breakout video that converts that traffic into subscribers at scale.

What language and country does @Sierra_sp upload in?

@Sierra_sp is based in Spain, and the channel description is written in Spanish, which strongly suggests Spanish-language content. The description includes the self-deprecating line about a 'NASA computer' that can't render videos above 2 fps — a joke that reads as Spanish-internet humor. The channel also links to a secondary channel at @alvdejaimorra. For competitors or researchers, this places Sierra_sp in the Spanish-language YouTube ecosystem, which has different competitive dynamics than English-language YouTube: generally less saturated in many niches, but with smaller per-niche audiences and lower CPMs.

How often does @Sierra_sp upload videos?

Across 286 total videos, the precise cadence isn't directly visible in public data, but the last 30 uploads are all long-form with zero Shorts. The recent batch shows 0 views in the data pull, which could mean very recent uploads that haven't accumulated views yet, or a distribution dropoff worth investigating. Long-running channels with 286+ uploads typically settle into either 1-3 videos per week or burst-and-pause cycles. Without seeing precise upload dates, the most accurate read is: this is a high-volume channel by total count, with cadence varying over its lifetime.

Why are @Sierra_sp's recent videos showing zero views?

The data pull on June 20, 2026 showed the last 10 long-form uploads sitting at 0 views, which has two likely explanations. First, they could be very recent uploads where YouTube's public view counter hasn't refreshed yet — totally normal in the first 1-6 hours. Second, the videos could be older but suppressed by the algorithm, which would be a more serious distribution issue. The channel's lifetime average of 3,115 views per video suggests historical performance is fine, so any zero-view pattern on recent uploads is more likely a data freshness issue than a real collapse.

Does @Sierra_sp post YouTube Shorts?

Based on the most recent 30 uploads, no — all 30 are long-form, with zero Shorts in the recent batch. For a channel at 1,680 subscribers in 2026, Shorts are usually the fastest discovery vector available, especially in non-English markets where Shorts competition can be lighter than long-form. The absence of Shorts in the upload mix is either a deliberate strategic choice or a missed opportunity. Spanish-language Shorts on YouTube currently have stronger organic reach than English-language equivalents, so this would be one of the first growth experiments I'd recommend if the creator wanted to test discovery.

What's the biggest growth opportunity visible for @Sierra_sp?

From outside data alone, the strongest signal is the 286-video, 1,680-sub ratio. That's a clear 'volume isn't the bottleneck' diagnosis. The most likely growth opportunity is packaging — better thumbnails, titles, and first-15-second hooks on the long-form content — or adding Shorts as a top-of-funnel discovery layer. Without access to retention curves or CTR data, those are the two highest-probability fixes. The channel has clearly proven it can show up consistently across 286 uploads; what hasn't been proven is whether each upload is earning its click. That's where I'd focus the next 90 days.

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