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How YouTube’s ‘Hype’ Is Powering Creators Through People, Not Just Algorithms

Now live in India, YouTube’s ‘Hype’ feature offers emerging creators a new path to visibility - one powered by audience votes rather than opaque algorithms. But its ripple effects may be felt far beyond discovery, reshaping how brands identify influence, allocate spends, and look at creators outside urban centres.

Tanishka Tyagi by Tanishka Tyagi
July 18, 2025
in Marketing
A A
How YouTube’s 'Hype' Is Powering Creators Through People, Not Just Algorithms

After years of algorithm-driven content discovery, YouTube is finally giving viewers a say and smaller creators a chance. The platform’s new feature, Hype, which rolled out across India recently after pilot tests in Brazil, Taiwan, and Turkey, is designed to spotlight creators whose long-form videos deserve visibility but often get lost in the shuffle.

The mechanism is simple, viewers get three Hypes a week to vote for videos uploaded within the past seven days. Smaller creators get bonus points per Hype, and the highest-ranking videos climb a weekly Top 100 leaderboard visible under the Explore tab. Importantly, the leaderboard resets every Sunday, creating a level playing field for newcomers to trend based on merit and audience support not just existing fanbase or subscriber count.

In its initial four-week beta phase across Brazil, Turkey, and Taiwan, YouTube stated that over 5 million Hypes were used across more than 50,000 channels. The company has also hinted at potential monetisation bonuses for high-performing creators, though the specifics remain under wraps.

Industry leaders believe that Hype isn’t just another feature update, it’s a shift in power. For emerging creators and the influencer marketing ecosystem, it could signal a deeper transformation in how influence is discovered, evaluated, and monetised.

Is Hype a moment of reset for emerging creators?

Arushi Gupta
Arushi Gupta

“Hype gives creators more control back. When discovery feels restricted by an unpredictable algorithm, Hype introduces intentional visibility. It says ‘this deserves to be seen’ especially powerful for creators who don’t always trend, but create consistently,” said Arushi Gupta, Business Head at Influencer.in.

For Praanesh Bhuvaneswar, Co-Founder and CEO of Qoruz, the shift is long overdue. 

“So many emerging creators feel stuck because of algorithm fatigue. For years, visibility on YouTube has been mostly in the hands of algorithms, which tend to favor creators who are already big. Hype changes that dynamic a bit by letting the audience step in and say, ‘we believe in this creator, let’s help them get seen’.” 

Praanesh Bhuvaneswar
Praanesh Bhuvaneswar

Bhuvaneswar said, “You’ll be able to see which creators have audiences that are motivated enough to take action and push them forward. That says a lot about trust and influence, which you can’t always measure with traditional metrics.”

The impact, he added, may even shift how creators approach their content. “We’ll probably see them investing more in building real relationships with their audience, creating more interactive and community-driven content so people feel inspired to support them. And brands should watch that closely because those are the creators who can really move the needle.”

Kruthika Ravindran
Kruthika Ravindran

Echoing the same sentiment, Kruthika Ravindran, Director – Key Accounts at TheSmallBigIdea, agreed that the shift is meaningful not just for creators, but for their communities. 

“The new Hype feature is an exciting development not only for creators but also for the viewers who support them. It can really transform the audience from being passive consumers to active participants,” she said. 

“For viewers, this adds a new layer of engagement, being able to rally behind their favourite creators and help amplify their voices. At the same time, viewers get to influence what’s trending, making YouTube a more interactive space for everyone involved,” she added. 

Beyond visibility, Hype may also introduce a new discovery metric for marketers, one that reflects intent and loyalty over reach. 

Ravindran said, “Hype is like a real-time popularity meter,” says Arushi. “It reflects how strongly a creator’s audience shows up for them. For brands, this is gold; it reveals not just engagement, but advocacy.”

Meanwhile, Gupta emphasised that creators will double down on community-first content things that spark loyalty and action. Expect more storytelling, direct asks, and community shout-outs. Brands should align with creators who know how to build hype authentically, not just chase trends.

Adding on to Gupta’s point, Ravindran said, “I look forward to this mutual collaboration between creators and viewers. It can be a real game changer fostering deeper connections and turning content discovery into a more collective and rewarding experience.”

One of the biggest potential shifts may come from beyond the metros. If discovery becomes audience-driven, creators from Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets may finally get the visibility they’ve long lacked.

Gupta said, “Regional creators often have deeply invested audiences but limited algorithm exposure. Hype lets these communities rally visibly, which could trigger a shift more brands may start looking beyond metros for real, rooted influence.”

Bhuvaneswar called this one of the most exciting ripple effects and said, “If fans can directly help surface creators they love, it gives regional voices and niche communities a better shot at being discovered. Brands need to pay attention.”

While Hype is still in its early days in India, its intent is clear: reward quality and connection over quantity. And if it works  for creators, communities, and marketers it may not just change how creators are discovered, but how influence is earned. Or as Bhuvaneswar puts it, “For both creators and brands, it’s a chance to double down on connection and community, not just numbers.”

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