Comments on: Schmidt says Google still scratching head over YouTube profits
CEO confirms that YouTube hasn't figured out yet how to make money. Promises new advertising methods.
CEO confirms that YouTube hasn't figured out yet how to make money. Promises new advertising methods.
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there's no hope.
Google has about as much "right to be compensated" as the artists whose stuff ends up there. Perhaps less.
No business has a "right" to compensation. They either have successes, or failures, or something in between. Google search would be a success (a resounding one at that). YouTube has potential, but it's also a legal ticking time-bomb.
YouTube has to make an ad-model work.
Ever tried advertising on YouTube? I have run campaigns which include YouTube and the results are incredibly disappointing.
People go to YouTube to see the latest dancing-dog video, or some politician having a "miss-spoke" moment. The content is all they look at - adverts on the site get very little click-through.
It simply is not an environment which people go to seeking information!
Digital Marketing Blog
Yeah iTunes has all the episodes but at $2 each?
money from C while showing B to A, is to disguise the ad in (or
as) the content. One, distinct ads are easily filtered by even the
least savvy consumer. Advertisers know this and pay
accordingly. Two, product placement can't be ignored or,
sometimes, even detected. When Joe Public watches the latest
dancing dog video, one of the related videos will be this
adorable kitten that juggles fuzzy dice wearing a blindfold with
a can of Sprite on the table in the background.
People go to YouTube to be entertained, they are passive content consumers and so in this situation the only ads that people pay attention to are something they cannot ignore - ie ad spots before the video.
Right now, google wants to monetize ten minute videos. This isn't going to cut it. I made a number of videos for youtube, but in almost every case I found myself unhappy with the ten minute limit. Sure I can splip longer content up into parts, but what I found is that even if you link the first part to the second part, the number of views for the second part nearly always lower than the first.
With Vimeo, on the the other hand, I can release longer format content with better quality. And what's more, I can instantly monetize the content by selling passwords to protected content I uploaded, among other things.
Either way, youtube is waste. With each change they make it becomes less appealing.
- by TOKiBiz June 12, 2008 10:17 PM PDT
- Based on revenues of $90 million and $3.5 million monthly server costs the EPV for YouTube is $0.06 and the Bizak Estimate is $318,000,000.
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