Should you use YouTube’s subtitle function, or add subtitles using FCPX or your video software?

man in long sleeve capturing photo

One thing I was quite naive about for my latest video was the sheer effort needed to put the subtitles on. I’m a translator so am fine with the language, for the most part, where I’m not I have ways of checking (just ask your wife), and I’ve put subtitles on both my own and another person’s videos before. I just forgot how tedious the process was, but now I think I know the best system.

All things considered, it’s best to use the YouTube subtitles function, rather than adding subtitles in your video editing software. There are a few reasons for this, but the biggest reason is that it’s also a way to add to your SEO, and a good one at that.

For my latest video, probably 3/4 is in Japanese so requires subtitles. I started by adding the subtitles through normal titles, before I realised that FCPX had a captions function. However, the captions function in FCPX is nowhere near as intuitive as the YouTube version. I had to keep copy pasting the captions, I couldn’t easily just add a new one, but it is there and you can turn it on and off when exporting your video.

So in terms of intuitiveness and SEO, YouTube wins out, but it’s still a risk because you have to tell viewers to turn the subtitles on, and that tiny little nuisance may be enough for them to stop watching. If that’s the case though, you probably couldn’t do videos in a second language in the first place.

Not by design, but as a means to counteract this, the first few minutes or so are in English, so if I’ve done my job and convinced people that the video is worth watching, it shouldn’t be a problem, should it? (Genuine question that time will tell)

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

More on the Zone of Proximal Development
Weird Japan
Learning words by frequency

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

gray and brown concrete building
The Last Samurai and the All Blacks
adult man in brown and white striped button up shirt raising his hand
What can you do about it?
pexels-photo-10573462.jpeg
Why Japanese people always reverse into the car park

RANDOM POSTS

The Astounding Waterfalls of Chokai-san
The Mogami River seen from Matsuyama, Sakata
Investing and making videos
It’s no Tarantino
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top