YouTube Series Planner
Turn a niche, audience, and seed topics into a 30-video faceless YouTube series map with content types, playlist groupings, and cadence suggestions.
Popular YouTube creator workflows
Faceless YouTube channels usually need more than one isolated tool. Use these connected pages for subtitles, chapters, packaging, Shorts planning, and editor-ready production prep that stays in the browser.
Build ready-to-paste chapter lists from transcripts, timestamps, or section notes.
Clean SRT, VTT, SBV, or transcript text for readable faceless-video captions.
Convert between the subtitle formats that show up most often in YouTube workflows.
Build intro text, links, chapter placeholders, CTA blocks, and pinned comments.
Turn copied transcript panels or subtitle files into clean reusable transcript notes.
Turn narration into scene rows, b-roll prompts, overlay notes, and sound cues.
Split narration into shorter overlay lines for mobile-friendly faceless edits.
Compare title options for clarity, curiosity, specificity, and packaging risks.
Create designer-ready thumbnail briefs from title, niche, and angle inputs.
Build reusable publish-day checklists for long-form videos or Shorts.
Find cut-worthy clip candidates inside longer transcripts and long-form scripts.
Map 30-video faceless YouTube series plans from niche, audience, and seed topics.
See the full browser-based cluster for faceless YouTube packaging and workflow prep.
Channel planning inputs
Describe the niche, audience, and core topic lanes you want to build into a 30-video faceless YouTube roadmap.
30-video series plan
Review the playlist lanes and cadence suggestion, then export the full roadmap into your editorial system.
What this tool helps you do
Channels that grow fastest stop treating each upload as a one-off and start running batches around shared pillars. This planner takes a niche, audience, and a handful of seed topics and stretches them into a 30-video map with sequels, comparisons, beginner content, and follow-ups already grouped into playlist lanes.
- Expand a few strong ideas into a deeper content map instead of repeatedly brainstorming from zero.
- Balance beginner, advanced, myth, update, and comparison formats inside one structured series.
- Group related uploads into playlist lanes that make the channel easier to browse and easier to binge.
- Create a planning export that can drive scripting, packaging, and publishing for weeks instead of one video at a time.
That makes it useful for new channels, relaunches, or creators trying to stabilize an inconsistent publishing rhythm.
How to use it
- Describe the niche and audience: Add the topic area and the kind of viewer the channel is trying to reach.
- Paste 5 to 10 seed topics: Give the planner a few core ideas so it can build pillars, sequels, comparisons, and follow-on videos.
- Review the 30-video map: Inspect the suggested content mix, playlist groupings, and upload cadence before you lock in the plan.
- Export the schedule: Download the plan as CSV or markdown and move it into your content calendar, editorial spreadsheet, or Notion board.
Common use cases
New channel planning
Map the first 30 videos before publishing so the channel has clearer topic coverage and sequencing.
Niche expansion
Stretch a small set of proven ideas into related pillars, sequels, comparisons, and updates.
Editorial calendars
Turn the plan into a spreadsheet or board that writers and editors can work from immediately.
Playlist strategy
Organize uploads into reusable content lanes so the channel feels more intentional over time.
Why this matters for faceless YouTube workflows
Faceless YouTube channels often win through systems rather than personality. A stronger content map helps the channel feel coherent, makes scripting easier, and creates more opportunities for internal follow-ups and sequels. That consistency compounds over time.
A 30-video plan also reduces operational drag. When the team already knows what comes next, packaging and production become more about execution than panic-driven topic selection every week.
Output and export options
Export the 30-video plan as CSV for a calendar or spreadsheet workflow, or markdown when you want a portable editorial brief with playlists and sequencing notes.
Who this is for
- Faceless YouTube creators planning a new channel or content season
- Operators building repeatable publishing systems for a niche channel
- Freelancers creating content maps for clients
- Small teams trying to connect scripting, editing, and publishing around one roadmap
- Creators who want a structured plan instead of chasing one-off topics forever
Related Tools
Compare YouTube title ideas with a simple scorecard for clarity, curiosity, length, specificity, repetition, and packaging mistakes.
Build structured YouTube descriptions with intro text, resource links, CTA blocks, disclaimers, hashtags, pinned comment drafts, and chapter headings.
Find short-form cut candidates inside longer transcripts and export clip plans with hook lines, opening frames, subtitle emphasis, and caption notes.
Related Guides
Map pillars, sequels, comparisons, and beginner content into a coherent publishing run.
See how high-output channels reuse systems for subtitles, packaging, planning, and upload prep.
Template the last mile of publishing so titles, descriptions, chapters, and assets land cleanly.
Privacy-first workflow
Topic planning happens locally in your browser. Elysiate does not need your unpublished channel strategy or seed-topic list on a server.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this planner generate exactly what I should publish?
It generates a structured first-pass series map. You should still refine titles, sequencing, and priority based on your niche, resources, and channel goals.
Why a 30-video plan?
Thirty videos is enough to expose patterns, playlists, sequels, and beginner-to-advanced coverage. It gives faceless channels a more strategic runway than a short list of disconnected ideas.
Can I use the plan for a client channel?
Yes. The export formats make it easy to move the plan into a spreadsheet, board, or editorial doc for client reviews.