Skip to main content

A Quick Guide to Livestreaming for Beginners

Broadcasting live to thousands of people used to be the stuff of television, requiring millions of dollars and oodles of fancy equipment. Now we have supercomputers in our pockets. With a smartphone or a GoPro, we can broadcast anything to friends over Facebook and YouTube in seconds.

Why Livestream?

It’s fast, it’s fun, and it’s immediate. Livestreaming goes straight to the internet. There’s no editing, no fiddling around with cuts, no overlays or sound effects, and no special filter to make you like Tom Cruise. Just you and the audience. You can show off the best of your skills. Did you learn a new guitar song? Just finished a painting? Want to let the world know about the best graphic novels? Livestream it.

live stream smartphone cooking show
ibnjaafar/Getty Images

At a time when social contact is lacking around the world, you can connect with people in a different way. Viewers can ask questions and you can answer them live. Chat with friends or anyone listening and feel a bit of that human connection that is so hard to get on recorded video.

Recommended Videos

Related Reading

If you own a business, you can chat with followers and invite them behind the scenes. For example, CBS News streamed a morning news segment live with a view of the studio behind the camera.

Once you’re done streaming, you can leave the recorded video on your Facebook profile, page, or YouTube channel. There’s no faster way to add videos to your profiles.

How to Livestream

The easiest ways to livestream are through the Facebook or YouTube apps. Throw in a GoPro and you’ve got a tiny camera you can mount anywhere or a first-person, point-of-view-style shot for your livestream.

Facebook

Livestreaming through the Facebook app on your phone is the easiest way to get running.

  1. Open the Facebook app.
  2. Click “Live” where you would normally post status updates.
  3.  Add a description and click “Start Live Video.”
  4. Livestream to all your fans (or your family).
live stream go pro camera laptop
SteafPong88/Getty Images

GoPro cameras are the easiest way to get unique angles for your videos and live streams. With mounts that let you tie, stick, and wrap the GoPro to anything, it’s easy to film top-down while you’re making food or from your forehead while playing the guitar. To livestream with the GoPro, you just need some sort of Wi-Fi, whether through your home or your phone’s hot spot.

  1. Open the GoPro app on your phone and pair it with your camera.
  2. On the Preview screen in the GoPro app, swipe right and click the “Set Up Live” button.
  3. Log into Facebook to link your account with the app.
  4. Add the details of the stream, like the name and who you want to see it, then tap “Set Up Live Stream.”
  5. Tap “Go Live.”
  6. To see comments and the results of your epic livestream, pop over to the Facebook app.
GoPro: How to Go Live with your GoPro

YouTube

Streaming with YouTube involves a couple more requirements. For starters, you’ll need 1,000 subscribers on your YouTube channel. The first livestream can take up to 24 hours to enable. Once you’ve got those set up, stream away!

  1. Open the YouTube app and click the video camera button at the top to post a video.
  2. Click “Go Live.”
  3. Set your live stream settings
  4. Click “Go Live” again.

Tips for Live Streaming

  • Make a list of things you want to say. It’s cool if you want your video to be dynamic and off-the-cuff but no one wants to see you say “um” and “ah” for an hour. Have a shortlist in your head of your points just like you would for a speech or a presentation.
  • Be mindful of your backgrounds. Livestreams are, well, live. If your wife or roommate walks through the background naked, they’re out there on the internet for all the viewers to see. Your wife hating you forever aside, backgrounds in your stream are important. Viewers don’t want to see your messy house; keep it simple so they can focus on you.
  • Test your sound before streaming. Bad video can come and go but bad audio makes it hard to watch a livestream. Record a quick video to see if your mic is working well and is loud enough.
  • Look at the camera. The camera is the tiny black dot at the top of your phone. It’s OK to look at the screen once and a while to see what you look like but all the people are in the tiny black hole at the top.

Livestreams for Inspiration

The YouTube Live channel is dedicated to recent livestreams from around the world, from Rolling Stones concerts to coronavirus news to giant Icelanders lifting thousands of pounds.

If animals are your thing, the Cincinnati Zoo does a daily livestream on Facebook showing off one of its animals like giant salamanders, sloths that smell like eggs, and Cruncher the alligator. The National Aquarium has a reef cam. And you can catch brown bears exploring Katmai National Park in Alaska.

Ross Collicutt
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ross is an outdoor adventure writer, amateur photographer, and computer programmer based on Vancouver Island, British…
Beginner’s guide to cigar shapes and sizes — and why they matter
Why your cigar choice says more about you than your watch (and how to pick the perfect one)
A collection of cigars

Walking into a cigar shop and facing what seems like a million options is enough to make anyone panic. Cigars stacked everywhere, each with a strange name, size, and a slightly different shape from the last one. If you haven't done this before, it's tempting to just grab something, anything, and run!But hold on a second. Those shapes actually matter. They aren't just there to look fancy or make things confusing. The size and shape change the whole experience of smoking that cigar – how it tastes, burns, and feels. It's kind of like how driving a tiny sports car is way different than driving a big truck. Both get you where you're going, but the experience along the way is not the same.

What are cigar vitolas?

Read more
The writer of one of Netflix’s biggest drama is taking on James Bond next
We still don't know who will star in this new installment.
James Bond at a casino

The news that Denis Villeneuve would be taking on the next James Bond film was certainly exciting for many, and as we continue to speculate about who might take over as 007, we're also learning more about who else will be working behind the scenes on the film.

We now know that Steven Knight, the writer behind Peaky Blinders, will be writing the next Bond movie. While Knight is best known for his work on TV, which includes Peaky Blinders and the recent Stephen Graham series A Thousand Blows, he's also the writer behind Spencer and Maria.

Read more
Every new Game of Thrones spinoff explained
George R.R. Martin's television world continues to grow
Matt Smith starring in House of the Dragon

When it first aired on HBO in the early 2010s, Game of Thrones dazzled audiences with revolutionary special effects and terrific acting in a unique fantasy world. Based on author George R.R. Martin's series of novels, the universe depicts the battles between several different noble families as they try to climb to the top of the continent of Westeros, both politically and figuratively. The war scenes, family drama, and massive number of characters helped make the story feel fresh and new every time a new episode aired.

As Martin's attention shifted to television and away from his books, fans have looked to the TV series to finish some of the stories he couldn't finish on the page. Game of Thrones left fans wanting more, despite its poorly received finale, and a plethora of spinoffs are on the way. House of the Dragon already has two seasons completed, and there are several others in the coming years to look forward to.
House of the Dragon
House of the Dragon finished its second season in 2024. The show chronicles the heated family dynamics of the Targaryen empire almost two centuries before the events of Game of Thrones. The third season should pick up the civil war between Queen Rhaenyra's forces and King Aegon's after a slow-building conflict throughout the second act.

Read more