Tuesday, June 11, 2013

YouTube mobile vs YouTube and Impact of TrueView

 

YouTube Mobile vs YouTube on Your TV and the Impact of TrueView





In an interview with GigaOm, a YouTube spokesperson said that 40 percent of Youtube videos are coming from mobile devices.
That is incredibly interesting to me. Why? Because it means that YouTube has done a great job of training its users. They have trained them to understand that there is no reason to watch YouTube video on any device other than mobile. Watching video on a mobile device is good enough. That is great news for YouTube mobile monetization. Advertisers want to reach mobile users and YouTube can deliver.
It also suggests that rather than using mobile devices as a discovery device and flicking it to a bigger screen like a TV, they are exclusively using mobile as a discovery and viewing device. I never thought that users would want to tie up their phones by sending their YouTube video to a bigger screen. I don’t think people perceive there is enough of an improvement in the viewing experience to tie up both their phones and their big screen TVs. It looks like YouTube users are satisfied with the mobile video viewing experience
Which leads to a question of whether or not we will see YouTube be a viable source of content for our big screens. TV manufacturers are making YouTube a core part of their application offerings. Their expectation is that YouTube will be a destination for video that will compete with traditional TV. Personally I have always thought that this was a fail because it was too much work for the consumer to find the content they want. YouTube has tried to organize content into channels, genres and branded content as a way to combat this problem. The idea was that, if users could develop an affinity for branded content, they would be happy to load the YouTube app on their TV and click on the branded content.
A funny thing happened on this journey. YouTube walked into funding higher-end content they hoped would provide viewing experiences competitive to traditional TV and almost as quickly walked away from it leaving their content partners upset and with very difficult financial models. YouTube is all about generating viewing minutes and the more expensive content obviously didn’t generate the minutes they had hoped for.
Not only that, but with the amazing success of TrueView, they could finally monetize all the junky user-generated videos on mobile and the web. If someone watching a cat video chooses to watch an ad rather than skip it, thats a good thing for the advertiser no matter what the user-generated content video shows.
So they have far less need to generate more minutes. With TrueView letting consumers skip the ad after a few not-too-intrusive seconds, they could not only serve ads around user-generated content, but they could learn what ads worked, on who and where. They didn’t need the big studios to generate more minutes for them. TrueView let them find higher margin minutes that were already in the YouTube ecosystem.
So what does this all mean?
I believe YouTube realizes that its future is all about mobile. While some users will throw video content to larger devices -- after all, who doesn’t want to show your friends the kids' soccer game or the vacation videos you recorded on your phone at Six Flags on a big screen? -- the super majority and then some of YouTube consumers will be perfectly content to find and consume video on their mobile devices. Our HDTVs will continue to be dominated by traditional TV sources with increasing usage of long-form video and over-the-top providers like Netflix, Hulu and gaming consoles.
It also means that professionally generated content is pretty much doomed on YouTube. If YouTube can monetize — particularly on mobile — user-generated content with far higher margins, why would they pay 55 percent of revenue to the channels? The uploading of videos on YouTube is accelerating, which means the user-generated content inventory for TrueView is accelerating, as well. While they will continue to offer great tools, why would YouTube offer any financial support or incentives to professional content creators? There just is no reason to. TrueView changed the game.
Photo: Fer Gregory/Shutterstock.com

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