YouTube Analytics CSV Analyzer

Analyze exported YouTube Studio CSV files in your browser to spot outliers, package-refresh candidates, retention problems, and repeatable faceless channel patterns without another analytics dashboard.

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.

YouTube Chapters Generator

Build ready-to-paste chapter lists from transcripts, timestamps, or section notes.

Subtitle Cleaner for YouTube

Clean SRT, VTT, SBV, or transcript text for readable faceless-video captions.

SRT, VTT, and SBV Converter

Convert between the subtitle formats that show up most often in YouTube workflows.

YouTube Description Builder

Build intro text, links, chapter placeholders, CTA blocks, and pinned comments.

YouTube Transcript Extractor

Turn copied transcript panels or subtitle files into clean reusable transcript notes.

YouTube Analytics CSV Analyzer

Turn Studio exports into an action queue for outliers, package refreshes, and retention fixes.

YouTube Retention Fix Planner

Convert retention notes and transcript structure into a cleaner rewrite brief.

YouTube Monetization Risk Checker

Review originality, reuse, copyright, disclosure, and repetitive-workflow risk before publish day.

YouTube Test and Compare Planner

Plan title and thumbnail tests with hypotheses, stop rules, and better winner notes.

YouTube Playlist and Home Tab Mapper

Map clearer playlists, Home tab sections, orphan videos, and missing bridge content.

Faceless YouTube Niche Validator

Pressure-test a faceless YouTube niche for repeatability, originality, visual proof, and monetization fit.

YouTube Rights and Attribution Log Builder

Document asset sources, licenses, attribution notes, and disclosure wording before publish day.

YouTube Channel Permissions Planner

Map team responsibilities to safer least-privilege YouTube roles.

Script to Shot List Builder

Turn narration into scene rows, b-roll prompts, overlay notes, and sound cues.

On-Screen Text Splitter

Split narration into shorter overlay lines for mobile-friendly faceless edits.

YouTube Title Scorecard

Compare title options for clarity, curiosity, specificity, and packaging risks.

Thumbnail Brief Builder

Create designer-ready thumbnail briefs from title, niche, and angle inputs.

YouTube Upload Checklist Builder

Build reusable publish-day checklists for long-form videos or Shorts.

Shorts Clip Planner

Find cut-worthy clip candidates inside longer transcripts and long-form scripts.

YouTube Series Planner

Map 30-video faceless YouTube series plans from niche, audience, and seed topics.

Browse the YouTube Creator Tools hub

See the full browser-based cluster for faceless YouTube packaging and workflow prep.

Studio CSV input

Paste an Advanced Mode export from YouTube Studio or load a CSV from your device. The analyzer stays in the browser and turns the raw export into an action queue.

Use this when you want to sort the channel into three buckets: which videos deserve follow-ups, which ones need packaging work, and which ones are really retention problems rather than SEO problems.

Action queue

Use the recommendations as a review queue. The goal is to tell the difference between a topic you should double down on, a package you should refresh, and a video that mostly needs retention work.

0 rows
0 standouts
0 action rows
0 Shorts
0 long-form
TitleStatusViewsCTRAvg viewed
Paste a CSV export to generate the action queue.

What this tool helps you do

Most creators do not need another giant dashboard. They need a cleaner way to turn YouTube Studio exports into a short list of actions: what to double down on, what to repackage, and what is really a watch-experience problem instead of a metadata problem.

  • Read YouTube Studio CSV exports locally so the analysis stays inside the browser.
  • Highlight the difference between stronger follow-up candidates and weaker packages that still deserve a thumbnail-title review.
  • Keep Shorts and long-form rows separate when that distinction matters, because mixed-format medians often hide the real signal.
  • Give faceless teams a lightweight weekly review tool that complements YouTube-native analytics instead of replacing them.

That makes the tool useful for solo creators, channel operators, and small teams who already trust YouTube Studio but want a cleaner operating layer on top of the raw export.

How to use it

  1. Paste or import the CSV export: Load a YouTube Studio Advanced Mode export from your device or paste the raw CSV directly into the tool.
  2. Filter the lane you want to review: Keep all rows together or isolate Shorts and long-form so the recommendations compare similar formats against similar formats.
  3. Review the action queue: Use the output to spot likely follow-up topics, videos that need packaging work, and rows that mostly need a retention fix instead.
  4. Export your review notes: Download the action queue for a weekly analytics review, editorial sync, or optimization log.

Common use cases

Weekly channel review

Turn one export into a short review queue before a content or packaging meeting.

Outlier follow-up planning

Find the videos that deserve sequels, comparisons, updates, or deeper topic coverage.

Package versus content diagnosis

Separate videos that need title-thumbnail work from videos that mostly need a stronger opening or better structure.

Client reporting

Export a cleaner summary for clients without forcing them to read raw Advanced Mode tables.

Why this matters for faceless YouTube workflows

Faceless channels compound through operating discipline. If your analytics review always ends in vague observations, you lose the compounding benefit of the library. A browser-side CSV analyzer turns the raw export into a more usable operating brief.

It also closes the gap between creator-side analytics and the actual editorial work that follows. A creator can review the CSV, hand the results to a writer or thumbnail designer, and move straight into action without reformatting everything by hand.

Output and export options

Export the action queue as CSV for spreadsheet reviews, markdown for written operating notes, or JSON for a more structured internal handoff.

csvmdjson

Who this is for

  • Faceless channel operators running weekly or biweekly analytics reviews
  • Creators who export Advanced Mode CSVs and want a lighter browser-first workflow
  • Freelancers and agencies preparing channel review notes for clients
  • Teams trying to separate topic wins from package problems
  • Anyone who wants to study Shorts and long-form without flattening both formats into one metric bucket

Related Tools

Related Guides

Privacy-first workflow

Your YouTube Studio export is analyzed in the browser. Elysiate does not need your channel performance export on a server just to build a review queue.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this replace YouTube Studio analytics?

No. It works best as a workflow layer on top of YouTube Studio. You export the CSV from Studio, then use this tool to turn that export into practical next actions.

Can it compare Shorts and long-form performance?

Yes. The filter helps you isolate Shorts, long-form, or mixed rows so you can review more comparable groups instead of relying on one blended channel median.

Why not just look at CTR and views manually?

Because the real question is not just whether a row looks high or low. The useful question is what kind of action it deserves next: follow-up, repackage, or retention fix.