
As Viacom
continues to expand its direct-to-consumer streaming video strategy, the company is turning to Google Cloud to enhance its content discovery capabilities.
Viacom, like many of its media
competitors, is creating more content every year, increasingly for a global audience that may consume it on different platforms.
The company is using Google Cloud for its
"Intelligent Content Discovery Platform.” The platform uses machine learning to automatically pull short clips from content as soon as it is ingested into the platform. It can highlight new
content or segments, or identify commercials to optimize the viewing experience.
The company is using Google Cloud for automated content tagging, discovery and intelligence.
Encompassing some 65 petabytes of content, the deal allows Viacom’s own teams to easily locate and understand the context of the content, while improving the efficiency of distribution
strategies to consumers.
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Viacom is also embracing Google’s Customer Reliability Engineering (CRE) strategy, collaborating closely with Google engineers to develop and
maintain applications.
The ability of Google Cloud’s solutions to scale across platforms and around the globe is seen as an asset.
While companies like Disney
and WarnerMedia are betting on their own premium direct-to-consumer offerings, Viacom has taken a multi-pronged approach to digital content.
The company has created and launched a number of
digital studios to produce original content for streaming services, like Netflix and Hulu, as well as social-media platforms, such as Facebook and Snapchat, an Viacom’s own digital
platforms.
At the same time, the company acquired Pluto TV to have a free, ad-supported streaming offering for consumers. Pluto TV has a rotating library of free programming, including
from Viacom’s own stable of channels.