Writing Video Descriptions
We all know men are visual creatures, but developing your ability at writing video descriptions will have a dramatic impact on your sales. Think of it as show-and-tell. When you post a new video, you show them a screenshot or a gif from the video, and then you need to tell them a little bit about the video by writing video descriptions that entice the reader.
I do this one of two ways:
- Tell them what they can expect to see you do in the video, or
- Address them as the object of your video.
I find the former option works best for clips like booty shaking or masturbating, and the latter works best for domination or anything done POV.
The photo above is a screenshot of the description from my “Cure For Chronic Masturbation” video. What I’ve done in this case is used option two; I’m addressing the reader as if they are the object of my video. This video is shot POV, so I am talking directly to the viewer. Occasionally I will even take lines of dialogue directly from my video and use it in my description. Don’t go overboard though; give a general overview or introduction to the video, do not go into detail about the entire clip. You want them to buy your video, not jerk off to your extremely vivid description. (We’ve all had guys jerk off to our gifs, so you know it’s possible).
Not all videos have talking (or, much talking) though, so what do you do then? In these cases, describe what you are doing. Below is a screenshot of the description from my “Purple Tantus Dildo” video. It has a little introduction to the video and tells the reader what to expect (ie, lots of super amazing orgasms).
I like to put keywords and the length of the video in my descriptions as well. It’s not necessary and not everyone does this, but I find the keywords help with searches, and the video length just gives them a little more information about your video.
Remember, they’re called “descriptions”, so “describe” what you are doing and use “descriptive” text! Are you “booty shaking”, or are you “shaking your big round booty right in the viewer’s face, wearing only a tiny thong”? Writing video descriptions is a skill, and it’s something that you can keep practising. Some videos are more difficult than others, and some sites don’t let you write long descriptions, so there are a few challenges. If you get stuck, just ask yourself – what am I wearing? what am I doing? am I saying anything directly to the viewer? That should help to get you started! I don’t profess to be amazing at writing video descriptions, but I do get a lot of practice writing them!