Why manual tracking helps
YouTube Studio is the source of truth for current analytics, but it is not always the easiest place to compare small channels, record notes, or preserve the exact numbers you care about on a specific date.
Videlytics gives you a lightweight routine: check your YouTube numbers, enter them into one screen, and build your own dated history for each channel.
What you can track
- Subscribers by channel
- Total views by channel
- Average long-form views
- Average Shorts views
- Notes for context, changes, experiments, or upload gaps
How Videlytics handles multiple channels
Free accounts can monitor up to 5 channels. The Overview page shows the current subscribers, recent subscriber gain, current total views, recent view gain, last entry date, and whether a channel is active or stale.
The Quick Entry page lets you update all active channels from one compact table. Each field is pre-filled with the most recent saved value, so you can update only what changed.
Content planning sits next to your stats
The content calendar helps you plan videos by channel, content type, status, planned publish date, actual publish date, YouTube URL, notes, and performance notes. Public published videos can be imported when a channel ID is saved, but future planning remains manual and flexible.
YouTube API is optional
Videlytics does not require YouTube OAuth. Manual entry is the core workflow. Optional API helpers can be used for experiments like syncing public video stats, but they are not required to use the app.
Export your data
Your stats and content calendar can be exported as CSV or JSON. There is also a full account backup JSON export, so your manual history is not trapped in the app.