Day 274: Podcasts and YouTube?

One of my nieces works in marketing for the City of Niagara Falls. I asked her about some of the tools she uses.

She sent me this information below --

Easy Video Editing Tools for YouTube Content (Free Options)​

Canva – Quick, Trending Content​

Pros:
- Very easy drag-and-drop editor
- Ready-made YouTube and social templates
- Built-in music, animations, transitions, and stock clips
- Great for brand consistency

Cons:
- Limited detailed video cutting
- Some features require paid version
- Best for short or simple videos

Best for: intros, promos, social clips, text-heavy videos

iMovie – Simple Video Cutting​

Pros:
- Free on Mac and iPhone
- Easy trimming and transitions
- High-quality YouTube exports
- Very stable performance

Cons:
- Only works on Apple devices
- Fewer design effects

Best for: vlogs, interviews, product demos, basic edits

Shotcut – Free All-Purpose Editor​

Pros:
- Completely free
- Works on Mac and Windows
- More control than Canva
- YouTube export presets

Cons:
- Older-looking interface
- Fewer templates

Best for: tutorials, longer videos, basic full edits

Simple Comparison Chart​


Tool

Works On

Best For

Ease of Use

Cost

Canva

Web, Mobile

Stylish content

Very Easy

Free/Paid

iMovie

Mac, iPhone

Basic edits

Very Easy

Free

Shotcut

Mac, Windows

Full video editing

Easy

Free
 
One of my nieces works in marketing for the City of Niagara Falls. I asked her about some of the tools she uses.

She sent me this information below --

Easy Video Editing Tools for YouTube Content (Free Options)​

Canva – Quick, Trending Content​

Pros:
- Very easy drag-and-drop editor
- Ready-made YouTube and social templates
- Built-in music, animations, transitions, and stock clips
- Great for brand consistency


Cons:
- Limited detailed video cutting
- Some features require paid version
- Best for short or simple videos


Best for: intros, promos, social clips, text-heavy videos

iMovie – Simple Video Cutting​

Pros:
- Free on Mac and iPhone
- Easy trimming and transitions
- High-quality YouTube exports
- Very stable performance


Cons:
- Only works on Apple devices
- Fewer design effects


Best for: vlogs, interviews, product demos, basic edits

Shotcut – Free All-Purpose Editor​

Pros:
- Completely free
- Works on Mac and Windows
- More control than Canva
- YouTube export presets


Cons:
- Older-looking interface
- Fewer templates


Best for: tutorials, longer videos, basic full edits

Simple Comparison Chart​


Tool

Works On

Best For

Ease of Use

Cost

Canva

Web, Mobile

Stylish content

Very Easy

Free/Paid

iMovie

Mac, iPhone

Basic edits

Very Easy

Free

Shotcut

Mac, Windows

Full video editing

Easy

FFreet
Thanks! I've been asking around too. Seeing a lot of the same recommendations, tech wise.
 
All the information is the same everywhere, more or less. Paint by numbers, content wise.

And honestly you can switch the subject matter from writing to football to jazz guitar and the format remains paint by numbers.

This, along with the astronomical expense, is the reason I don't go to conferences anymore unless I'm paid to be there.
 
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