The Short Sweet Life Of Online Video

August 12, 2009

Post a video on You Tube or another Web site and theoretically it remains online forever. But in many ways it is a perishable commodity.

Here are some interesting stats released by TubeMogul at the Search Engine Strategies conference.

*Video views generally peak in four days. After 14 days, a video will have received 50 percent of its lifetime audience.

*Ten percent of a clip’s audience will watch only 10 seconds. A much greater share is gone before 60 seconds.

Part of the reason for the lack of attention is the glut of online video content. The number of viewers is growing by 35 percent while the amount of video online is expanding by 75 percent.

In most instances, posting a video on You Tube will bring a publisher 3,000 more views than posting it on another site.

Almost 50 percent of videos are found through an online search. The remaining referrals come from a long tail of sites such as blogs and can give a video extended life.


Google Looking At New Ways To Make Money With Video Including Charging Per View

July 29, 2009

Google has being crowing lately about the progress it has made selling advertising on You Tube.

But the search giant isn’t convinced ads are the only way to make money with online video.

Youll see us in all business models, says You Tubes Shishir Mehrotra

"You'll see us in all business models," says You Tube's Shishir Mehrotra

Google will participate in alternative business models, including charging users a subscription fee or a cost per view to watch online, says Shishir Mehrotra, director of product management for You Tube monetization. “You’ll see us in all business models.”

Mehrotra did not say Wednesday how soon these new models would arrive. Today most content creators favor an ad-drive model, so Google and others can yet put up a wall and charge people to enter, he said at the Always On Summit at Stanford University.

But some day? At present, there is enough video online to create an almost unlimited inventory for ads. So advertising will remain the most dominate model, he sayd.

Plus, it is difficult to draw a line between what content should be considered premium and what should be considered free, he said.

But with You Tube, “we wouldn’t be in this business if we didn’t think there’s a profitable business,” he added.


The World Of Video According To Bill Gurley

July 29, 2009

Online video is big and it is getting bigger. So will it change the Internet and is a boatload of money to make?

By 2010 the Internet on television will be a real market, says VC Bill Gurley

By 2010 the Internet on television will be a real market, says VC Bill Gurley

Yes, according to Bill Gurley, general partner at Benchmark Capital. But perhaps not in ways you might expect.

Gurley gave a keynote address Wednesday at the Always On Summit and Stanford University, and here are some of the highlights.

First of all, the Internet is coming to the television, says Gurley. This melding will start this year and, “by December 2010, I think this will be a real market,” says Gurley.

Not only will this change the market for TV sets, but it will start a competitive battle for the operating system of the television, he said.

Here are some other observations from his talk:

*Silicon Valley has it wrong. Wireless will not create an alternate distribution channel for video. “I think there is not chance of this,” Gurley said. “There is not enough air capacity.”

*Hulu will develop a premium paid offering for Web viewers;

*Comcast will launch a Hulu competitor within 12 months. It will deliver an online library of Comcast content;

*The online video market could mirror the satellite radio market, with competitors paying ungodly sums for differentiated content (think Howard Stern);

*Specialized non-fiction content will be especially valuable, such as an interview with Warren Buffett. Differentiated content in general will be valuable.


Hulu Is A Rocket Ship As Online Video Viewing Spring Back To Life In March

April 28, 2009

It seems February’s nervousness is subsiding when it comes to viewing videos online.

Hulu becomes third most trafficed video site

Hulu becomes third most trafficed video site

After a 12 percent decline in video traffic during the month, video use rebounded in March, returning to more normal growth trends. Traffic rose 11 in March v. February, according to comScore.

Hulu, the television site started by Fox and NBC, led the way. For the first time, Hulu cracked the top three video sites, passing Yahoo and following just Google (read: You Tube) and Fox Interactive (read: MySpace).

Google accounted for 41 percent of videos viewed on line – by far the leader. Fox’s market share is 3 percent. But it may not remain in second place for long.

Hulu’s share is 2.6 percent and it is closing fast.

Watch out MySpace, your days may be numbered.


Internet Users More Willing To Endure Ads For Free Video Content

April 7, 2009

Online viewers of television and other video content are increasingly willing to put up with advertising to get their programs and movies for free, a survey shows.

However, they also are slightly less likely to link through to an advertiser’s Web site to learn more about a product or service.

The study is a clear indication that free is currency of choice on the Internet. It suggests that consumers are becoming more accepting of ads after initially being turned aside by the prospect of ads cluttering videos on sites such as Google’s YouTube.

According to the study conducted by Knowledge Networks and reported by eMarketer, 80 percent of people viewing television online now say they prefer ads in exchange for unpaid programming, compared with 67 percent in 2006.

Similarly, 37 percent said they watched videos with pre-roll ads, an increase from 2006.

However, fewer viewers now forward ads to others and only 25 percent clicked through to n advertiser’s Web site.

That means they are probably less effective.


All In One Guide To Online Movies

March 25, 2009

It is no secret that movies are available for free on the Internet. But online viewing is still a niche activity, largely because of slow broadband connections and because people generally have to watch the videos on their computers.

Enjoying online movies is about more than bandwidth and large screens: its awareness

Enjoying online movies is about more than bandwidth and large screens: it's depends on awareness

Another reason holding back public adoption is awareness. Most people don’t know where to go to find content.

A movie-use guide for beginners published Wednesday could help change that. Helen Anderson published the guide on her Web site, Brainz, and it lists the most popular places to turn to for programming and films.

Included are the usual suspects: Hulu, Fancast and Joost. But then, too, she lists The Web Archive for older films, and peer-to-peer applications, such as  Limewire, eMule and Frostwire.

And of course there are the paid sites at Amazon, iTunes and Netflix.

Check out the article here.


Older Americans Embrace Technology Faster Than Younger Ones

March 22, 2009

The assumption has been that younger American use technology more readily than their older, more technophobic peers. This seems to be changing.

Baby boomers (45 years and older) are rushing to catch up to generations X and Y at an accelerating pace. In doing so, they are bring the digital age to the broad swath of the American population like never before.

According to a survey from Accenture, baby boomers sharply accelerated their adoption of digital technologies over the past year while members of Gen Y (18 to 24) went into something of a holding pattern.

The study found boomers embraced new technologies 20 times faster than their younger country mates, with special cravings for social sites, podcasts and blogs.

For example, boomers showed a 59 percent increase in their willingness to connect on social networks, compared with only a 2 percent increase for Gen Y. They demonstrated a 67 percent jump in reading blogs and listening to podcasts compared with essentially no increase for Gen Y.

This same trend held true over the past year for posting online video, playing video games and listening to iPods.

In other words, the technology gap between the young and old is closing.

The finding from the November and December survey of 3,000 online consumers caught Accenture executives by surprise “The acceleration by baby boomers struck us,” says Kumu Puri, Accenture’s senior executive of its consumer technology practice. “It was the rate of growth I found surprising.”

So what is the explanation for the shift? Perhaps older consumers want to stay relevant to the workplace with the assumption they will have to work until later in life, says Puri. They also might want to stay up to date with the nation’s changing social fabric.

On the other hand, the features in some of these technologies might not be changing fast enough to keep the interest of the young, adds Puri. As if to prove this point, Gen Y’s interest in the rapidly changing arena of mobile data technologies was greater than that of the boomers.

As well, saturation likely played a role. Gen Y’s adoption of social networks has slowed, but then 82 percent of them already belong. Their interest in game consoles is down, but then 70 percent already own a console.

Perhaps the survey’s most important message is to technology companies. “We think it’s going to require them to think differently about their businesses,” says Puri.


Growth In Online Video Viewing Slows In January

March 6, 2009

The growth in the number of videos viewed online slowed in January to 4 percent.

That’s down from 13 percent in December, according to comScore.

The fluctuations in the tracking data are hard to interpret, especially with the volatile economy. But what’s clear is the continued growth in usage. In January, U.S. Internet users watched 14.8 billion videos, with Google’s You Tube accounting for 91 percent of the growth, says comScore.

The service passed 100 million viewers for the first time, up from 98.9 million in December.

Americans watched 14.3 billion online videos in December.

Google is by far the most popular destination for video, with a 42.9 percent share of the market in January. Number two, Fox Interactive Media (owners of MySpace), has only 3.7 percent share.


Americans Watch More Video On Mobile Devices Than Computers

February 23, 2009

Television viewing continues to set records in the U.S. with the average American watching an astonishing 151 hours of monthly programming – almost 5 hours a day.

Consumption of video on the Internet and on mobile devices is on the rise as well, with average monthly viewing reaching 2 hours and 53 minutes and 3 hours and 42 minutes, respectively, in the fourth quarter.

Time-shift viewing, where programs are recorded on a digital video recorder, also increased to 7 hours and 11 minutes, according to a new Nielsen study.

The study underscores the notion that while video consumption on the Internet and mobile devices is increasing, it so far hasn’t detracted from traditional viewing on the home’s big screen.

However, it does show a generational shift. Video viewing on the Internet is strongest among people 18 to 34 and on mobile devices children between 12 and 17 are by far the biggest users.


Online Video Viewing Hits A Record In December

February 4, 2009

Americans watched 14.3 billion online videos during the month of December, a record and a 13 percent rise from November, comScore says.

Google, with its You Tube video site, drew two out of three of the 150 Americans who went online to view a video – or more than 100 million people.

The average viewer saw 98 videos.

According to comScore, more than three-quarters of Internet users saw at least one video and the average viewer watched 309 minutes. The duration of the average video was 3.2 minutes, but television-viewing site Hulu kept the average user 10 minutes, more than any other top site.

Here are the most popular video sites:


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