The great thing about the ease of digital cinematography is that anyone can create video that can be seen around the world. That’s the bad thing too. Plus, many of those people want
to be paid.
The video world is abuzz about
YouTube’s plan to start a premium, commercial-free pay YouTube, possibly starting this year. Most of the stories say that would put them in competition with Netflix, Hulu Plus, HBO Now,
Vimeo, and the new Vessel, which already are, or soon will be, offering pay channels for video of all lengths.
I tend to think YouTube has got to be thinking like that, but not so
much from a jump-in-while-the-water’s-good standpoint. When everybody’s charging money to watch content, and consumers are carefully figuring what to pay for, you’d better not be
last in line. If I’m paying for HBO Now, Netflix, Vessel, Amazon Fire, MLB, CBS All Access, YouTube’s own beta-testing Music Key and who knows what else, at some point, the wallet’s
going to close.
YouTube is essential now. Maybe not a year from now. That seems amazing to say, but the shopping center is getting crowded with specialty stores.
In fact, a
new Web site out of Iceland, Oz.com, is launching worldwide today. It lets creators put their stuff up there, and here’s the wrinkle -- ”Every channel on
OZ has a monthly subscription price. You decide your price – after all, it’s your channel!” according to the site. (Creators get 70%.) It’s having its “global
launch” event in Los Angeles tonight at the Ace Hotel. For nothing else, it’s worth going to see four top bands from Iceland.
Behind the scenes, of course, there’s
a money war going on, which may be prompting YouTube’s pay endeavor. The new Vessel gives creators a much better deal than YouTube does, and to that end, YouTube now says it will give creators
55% from its pay subscribers’ take, pooled among all the channels, apportioned by use. That might not be so hot either.
The Verge says YouTube is thinking about charging $10 a month. To me, that’s an awful lot of money to
avoid a piece of pre-roll, but maybe I know how to turn away from a screen better than some people. (And YouTube lets you opt out after a few seconds.)
I’d also wonder
if pay YouTube consumers are going to be fed the clever longer-than-average commercial messages--the Super Bowl kind-- that now go viral via the ad-friendly YouTube. Clever is clever but I’d
hate to pay 10 bucks a month to pay for ads, regardless of their brilliance.
I’m sure I’m missing something.
YouTube did not spring this pay version on
an unsuspecting public. (Indeed, I know about a million video types who have predicted it for years.) CEO Susan Wojcicki last October disclosed that YouTube was working on a pay site, while seeming to
get all misty over the good old (current) days.
“YouTube right now is ad-supported, which is great because it has enabled us to scale to a billion users, “ she said
back then. But there’s going to be a point where people don’t want to see the ads.”
Apparently, we are at that point, no doubt helped by a healthier economy --
could you imagine a pay launch for Smosh in 2009? -- and competition from all the new players.
There’s also a now acknowledged recognition that however possible, many consumers
just want to avoid commercials. Fortune’s report on YouTube’s new pay plan is headlined, “YouTube Plans Video Subscription Service Without Those Annoying Ads” and
The Wall Street Journal today reports on how ad blockers are becoming
increasingly problematic for publishers -- up to 5% of users employ them -- and maybe worse on mobile devices than they can accurately discern.
The YouTube letter to creators says mobile
viewing makes up more than half of its viewing, and ad revenue from mobile sources is up 200% year to year. That’s where YouTube’s future is.
Actually, though, it’s
hard to tell exactly where YouTube’s future is. For a site with 1 billion monthly viewers, any missteps could be almost unbelievably catastrophic.
pj@mediapost.com