CHABOT.DEV — A FIELD JOURNAL — VOLUME I, NO. 4

09    PLATFORMS   ✣

YouTube for Developers.

YouTube is the largest single platform for developer education and content discovery as of 2024–2026. The intersection of search ranking, recommendation algorithm, monetisation, and global reach has made YouTube essential to any modern D…

YouTube is the largest single platform for developer education and content discovery as of 2024–2026. The intersection of search ranking, recommendation algorithm, monetisation, and global reach has made YouTube essential to any modern DevRel content strategy.

Why YouTube matters more than it did

Three trends have compounded over 2018–2026:

  1. Video as the default learning format for the post-2015 generation of new developers. Many newer developers prefer video walkthroughs over written tutorials.
  2. YouTube as a search engine. YouTube is the second-largest search engine globally; queries like “Postgres tutorial” or “Kubernetes basics” return YouTube results that often outrank text content.
  3. AI-mediated discovery uses YouTube transcripts as a substantial training data source; well-produced video content increasingly influences how AI assistants explain technologies.

The top general-purpose technical channels

A representative sampling (approximate subscriber counts mid-2026):

  • Fireship (Jeff Delaney) — ~4M. 100 Seconds of Code, The Code Report, Beyond Fireship.
  • freeCodeCamp — ~10M. Long-form courses, multi-hour tutorials.
  • NetworkChuck — ~4M. Networking, Linux, cybersecurity.
  • Programming with Mosh — ~4M. Beginner programming courses.
  • Traversy Media — ~2.5M. Full-stack web tutorials.
  • The Net Ninja — ~1.9M. Web dev tutorials.
  • Coding Train (Daniel Shiffman) — ~1.8M. Creative coding.
  • Web Dev Simplified (Kyle Cook) — ~1.7M. JS, React.
  • ByteByteGo (Alex Xu) — ~1.5M. System design.
  • Computerphile — ~2.4M. Computer-science explainers.
  • ThePrimeagen — ~1M (YouTube; also large on Twitch). Software engineering, Vim, software culture.
  • t3.gg (Theo Browne) — ~550K. Modern full-stack TypeScript.
  • ArjanCodes — ~340K. Python design.
  • Continuous Delivery (Dave Farley) — ~250K. Software engineering practice.
  • Andrej Karpathy — ~700K. ML deep dives; ex-OpenAI / ex-Tesla.

Specialised channels worth knowing

  • Hussein Nasser — Backend / databases.
  • Bret Fisher — Docker / Kubernetes.
  • Techworld with Nana — DevOps / Kubernetes.
  • Anthony Sottile — Python deep dives.
  • DevOps Toolkit (Viktor Farcic) — Platform engineering.
  • Two Minute Papers — ML research summaries.
  • Yannic Kilcher — ML paper reviews.
  • 3Blue1Brown — Math, ML intuition.
  • Sam Witteveen — AI tutorials.
  • All About AI — AI builds.
  • Sentdex — Python ML.

Company-operated developer channels

Most major developer-product companies maintain YouTube channels. Notable examples:

  • GitHubGitHub Universe sessions, GitHub Stars features, video learning.
  • Microsoft Developer — Cross-stack tutorials and conferences.
  • Google for Developers — Android, Web, AI talks.
  • AWS — Workshops, re:Invent session recordings.
  • Stripe Developers — Sessions content, technical talks.
  • Twilio — SIGNAL talks and original content.
  • HashiCorp — Tutorials and HashiConf talks.
  • MongoDB — MongoDB University-adjacent video content.
  • Cloudflare — Workers content, Cloudflare TV.
  • JetBrains TV — JetBrains.
  • PyData — Conference talk archive (channel for the data community).
  • CNCF — KubeCon and project sessions.

Video formats that work for DevRel

FormatLengthStrengthExample exemplar
Short explainers30–60 secondsShorts feed; algorithmic boostFireship’s Code Report style
100-seconds-of-X~100 secondsHigh completion rate; share-friendlyFireship’s 100 Seconds of Code
Tutorial walkthroughs10–30 minutesSearch-friendly; durableTraversy / Net Ninja
Conference talks30–45 minutesBrand and authorityMost company channels
Long-form courses1–10 hoursfreeCodeCamp modelfreeCodeCamp, Coding Train
Live codingVariableAuthenticity, communityThePrimeagen, Tsoding (Twitch)
Interviews / podcasts (video)30 minutes – 2 hoursReach; cross-platform distributionLex Fridman, Latent Space

Sponsorships

Many top channels run sponsored segments. Common DevRel sponsors include Auth0, Datadog, Snyk, MongoDB, Linode (Akamai), DigitalOcean, Cloudflare, JetBrains, and many others.

Approximate sponsorship rates (US, 2024–2026):

Channel sizePer-sponsorship rate range (USD)
50K–200K subscribers$1K–$5K
200K–500K subscribers$3K–$15K
500K–1M subscribers$10K–$25K
1M–5M subscribers$20K–$60K

Rates vary significantly by channel, segment length, audience quality, and historical engagement. Some channels operate exclusively through agencies; others negotiate directly.

For DevRel teams, sponsorship of relevant channels is often the most efficient paid acquisition channel available — far higher quality than generic ad networks but requiring more relationship work.

Operational notes

  • Captioning is mandatory. Both for accessibility and because AI assistants ingest transcripts.
  • Chapter markers. Improve viewer experience and SEO.
  • Code samples in the description. Always link to the runnable code.
  • Thumbnail-and-title discipline is as important as content quality for discovery.
  • Cadence beats production value. Weekly cadence at lower polish outperforms monthly perfection for most channels.

See also