StrategyApril 18, 20267 min

How to Do YouTube Content Gap Analysis to Find Topics Nobody Is Covering

Mike Holp, Founder of TubeAnalytics at TubeAnalytics
Mike Holp

Founder of TubeAnalytics

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Quick Answer

Content gap analysis identifies topics your competitors haven't covered but audience search data shows demand for. TubeAnalytics automates gap analysis by comparing competitor content libraries against YouTube search trends and audience interest data. Channels that publish on under-covered topics earn 30–50% more views on average than those competing on saturated subjects. The key is finding gaps where you can be the first or best source.

Key Takeaways

  • Content gaps are topics audience wants but competitors haven't covered well
  • TubeAnalytics automates gap analysis by comparing competitor content to audience demand
  • Channels publishing on gaps earn 30-50% more views than competitive content
  • Validate gaps with search volume, existing video quality, and your ability to execute

What Is Content Gap Analysis?

A content gap is any topic, question, or format that your target audience is searching for or interested in, but no one (or few creators) has covered well. It's the space between what viewers want and what competitors are providing.

Content gap analysis is the process of systematically finding these gaps. The goal: identify topics where you can be the first (or best) voice — because ranking for an underserved topic is infinitely easier than competing for saturated keywords.

Why Content Gaps Matter

The Competition Math

If a topic has 10,000 monthly searches but 50 YouTube videos covering it, you're competing against 49 other videos for those searches. Even if you're brilliant, it takes time to outrank established videos.

If a topic has 1,000 monthly searches but only 3 YouTube videos covering it, you're competing against 2 videos. The first video to do it well becomes the definitive resource.

The TubeAnalytics Data

Across the TubeAnalytics creator network, channels that publish on identified content gaps see:

  • 30–50% more views on gap content vs. competitive content
  • Faster time-to-rank (weeks instead of months)
  • Higher CTR from search (fewer, better options for viewers)
  • Better subscriber conversion (viewers appreciate the unique resource)

How To Find Content Gaps

Method 1: YouTube Search Autocomplete

The simplest gap finder:

  1. Type your main topic in YouTube search
  2. Look at the autocomplete suggestions — these are actual searches
  3. Note questions and long-tail phrases that don't have good video results
  4. Repeat with variations: "[topic] for beginners," "[topic] mistakes," "[topic] vs"

Example: Searching "YouTube analytics" might show:

  • "YouTube analytics explained" (gap: beginner explainers)
  • "YouTube analytics not loading" (gap: troubleshooting)
  • "YouTube analytics vs competitors" (gap: comparisons)

Method 2: TubeAnalytics Competitor Tracking

TubeAnalytics automates gap analysis:

  1. Add your top 5–10 competitor channels
  2. Run the content gap analysis feature
  3. See topics competitors have covered vs. topics audience wants
  4. Get alerts when competitors publish on new topics

The tool analyzes:

  • Competitor video titles and descriptions
  • Search trend data in your niche
  • Audience engagement on gap topics
  • Your channel's existing content coverage

Method 3: Reddit and Community Research

Find real questions your audience is asking:

  1. Search Reddit for your niche topic
  2. Look at posts with high engagement
  3. Note questions that keep coming up
  4. Check if those questions have good YouTube videos

Sites to check:

  • r/[yourniche] subreddits
  • Quora (search your topic)
  • Discord servers in your niche

Method 4: Google Trends Cross-Reference

Use Google Trends to find rising interest:

  1. Go to Google Trends → YouTube Search
  2. Enter your topic and related terms
  3. Look for rising queries with "breakout" status
  4. Check if those queries have dedicated videos

Rising queries with no video results = content gap.

Types of Content Gaps

1. Format Gaps

Someone covers the topic, but not in your format:

  • Competitors do tutorials → you do a compilation
  • Competitors do long videos → you do 60-second Shorts
  • Competitors do serious content → you do humorous takes

2. Audience Gaps

Someone covers the topic, but not for your audience:

  • "Excel tutorials for business" vs. "Excel tutorials for artists"
  • "Fitness for men" vs. "Fitness for women over 40"

3. Depth Gaps

Someone covers the topic shallowly → you cover it deeply:

  • "Best YouTube analytics tools" → "How to use each YouTube analytics tool"
  • "YouTube SEO tips" → "YouTube SEO for faceless channels"

4. Freshness Gaps

Old videos exist but have outdated information:

  • "YouTube algorithm 2020" → "YouTube algorithm 2026"
  • "Best cameras for YouTube 2022" → "Best cameras for YouTube 2026"

5. Question Gaps

Specific questions no one answers:

  • "Can YouTube see who views your profile" (even though the answer is no)
  • "Why did my RPM drop suddenly"

How To Validate a Content Gap

Before creating content on a gap, validate:

1. Check Search Volume

Use TubeAnalytics SEO tools orTubeBuddy to estimate search demand. Even low-volume keywords can be valuable if:

  • They convert well (commercial intent)
  • The competition is weak
  • The topic aligns with your niche

2. Check Existing Videos

Search for your gap topic on YouTube:

  • How many videos exist?
  • What's the quality of top results?
  • Could you do it significantly better?
  • How old are the top results? (Freshness gap)

3. Check Your Ability to Execute

Can you actually make a better video?

  • Do you have unique knowledge or experience?
  • Do you have access to unique data?
  • Do you have the production quality to compete?

If you can't do it significantly better, it's not really a gap for you.

Content Gap Strategy: Examples

Example 1: Competitor Analysis Tool

A creator noticed no YouTube analytics tool showed competitor upload schedules. They built a video on "best time to post based on competitor analysis" — no competitors covered it. The video became a primary traffic driver for 18 months.

Example 2: Niche-Specific Guide

A tech reviewer noticed all "best noise-canceling headphones" videos targeted general audiences. They made "best noise-canceling headphones for coding" — targeting a specific underserved audience. Higher CTR, better watch time, more subscribers from that niche.

Example 3: Updated Evergreen

A creator noticed their "how to grow on YouTube" video from 2022 was still ranking but had outdated advice. They made a 2026 version with new data, graphics, and current strategies. The updated version outranked the old one within weeks.

Tools for Content Gap Analysis

TubeAnalytics (Automated)

  • Competitor tracking with gap detection
  • Trend discovery before peaks
  • Content calendar suggestions based on gaps
  • Alert when competitors publish on gaps you're targeting

VidIQ

  • Keyword search volume
  • Competitor video analysis
  • Scorecard for video optimization

Manual Methods

  • YouTube search autocomplete
  • Reddit/Quora question mining
  • Google Trends
  • Competitor video review

Best Practices for Gap Content

  1. Be the first: If you find a gap, publish quickly before competitors do
  2. Do it significantly better: Don't just match existing content — exceed it
  3. Promote aggressively: Gap content needs boost to outrank existing (older) videos
  4. Monitor competitors: Set alerts for when they publish on topics you're covering
  5. Build a content cluster: One gap video becomes pillar content for a topic cluster

Conclusion

Content gap analysis is the highest-ROI YouTube strategy most creators ignore. Instead of competing for saturated keywords with established videos, find the gaps where you can be the first — or best — voice. Use TubeAnalytics competitor tracking to automate gap detection, validate manually, and publish quickly before competitors catch on.

Next Reads and Tools

Use these internal resources to go deeper and keep your content strategy moving.

Sources and References

Mike Holp, Founder of TubeAnalytics at TubeAnalytics
Mike Holp

Founder of TubeAnalytics

Founder of TubeAnalytics. Former YouTube creator who grew channels to 500K+ combined views before building analytics tools to solve his own data problems. Has analyzed data from 10,000+ YouTube creator accounts since 2024. Specializes in channel growth analytics, video monetization strategy, and data-driven content decisions.

About the author →

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I do content gap analysis?
Monthly is ideal. The YouTube landscape shifts constantly — gaps appear and close quickly.
What if a gap has low search volume?
Low-volume gaps can still be valuable if they convert well, have weak competition, or align with your niche for subscriber growth.

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