YouTube Tests ‘Ask Studio’ Analytics Review Bot

The AI bot will provide data on channel performance, and where you can improve.

YouTube Tests ‘Ask Studio’ Analytics Review Bot

YouTube looks to be developing another AI assistant tool within YouTube Studio, with this one focused on analyzing your channel stats and providing performance summaries, and tips on where you can improve.

YouTube Studio AI bot

As you can see in this example, posted by YouTube consultant Aniket Mishra (and shared by Lindsey Gamble), YouTube is experimenting with a tool called “Ask Studio”, which will give you an AI bot specifically focused on your YouTube channel data.

As explained by YouTube:

“Ask studio helps you summarize comments and feedback from your videos, make sense of your video and channel stats, and brainstorm ideas and outlines for your next videos.”

So rather than having to comb through the data yourself, you’ll soon be able to ask an AI tools to give you the key notes, which could help you uncover more ways to optimize and maximize your content.

Though functionally, it’s not really new.

YouTube’s been rolling out AI comment summaries to channels over the past year, it added more in-depth channel insights, with AI notes, last month, while it also gives you AI-generated ideas and tips in the “Inspiration” tab.

So, really, this would be more about simplifying and streamlining these various processes into a single interface, as opposed to you having to go to each element to glean all of these results.

It’s also gradually expanding access to its in-stream AI chatbot, which has the same icon as this new Studio bot tool.

YouTube chatbot

So again, it’s more about integration of these elements than it is adding new features, as such. Though that’s still useful, and it could make it much easier to uncover key audience trends and notes that you otherwise would have missed.

It’s a worthy experiment either way, which could end up being a valuable complement to your planning.

We’ve asked YouTube for more information about the testing of “Ask Studio.”