Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Oct, 2016 01:14 PM
    SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube has emerged as a break-out star in Google's cast of services as the online video site upstages cable television for a younger generation of viewers looking for amusement, news and music on their smartphones.
     
    The trend has shifted a bigger chunk of advertising budgets from traditional network television programming to the more eclectic and diversified mix of clips ranging from cute cat videos to sobering shots of street violence found on YouTube.
     
    As more advertising dollars flow to YouTube, it's making the already hugely profitable Google even more prosperous.
     
    In a third-quarter report released Thursday, Google's corporate parent, Alphabet Inc., said it earned $5.1 billion, or $7.25 per share, a 27 per cent increase from the same time last year. After subtracting advertising commissions, revenue climbed 21 per cent to $18.3 billion. Both figures topped analyst projections.
     
    All that money is providing Google with more financial firepower to buy the rights to stream cable networks' shows on YouTube, too, something likely to reel in even more viewers. It also is helping to finance Alphabet's investments in far-flung projects ranging from self-driving cars to internet-beaming balloons. That segment, known as "Other Bets," lost $865 million during the July-September period, narrowing from a $980 million setback last year as Alphabet imposed more expense controls.
     
     
    SMART DEAL
     
    YouTube already has proven to be one of the best bets that Google has ever made since it bought the video site for $1.76 billion a decade ago.
     
    At that juncture, YouTube consisted mostly of crudely made videos shot by amateurs and clips pirated from movie and TV studios that were threatening to sue the site into oblivion. It had built a worldwide audience of about 72 million viewers when Google took control in November 2006.
     
    Since then, YouTube has evolved into a far more polished channel that has spawned unlikely stars such as "PewDiePie" (Swedish comedian Felix Arvid Ulf Kjellberg) while largely making peace with studios by creating an automated screening system that detects pirated content. YouTube says it has paid more than $2 billion to studios that have chosen to leave their material on the site and share in the ad revenue generated by their clips.
     
    Meanwhile, YouTube's audience has surpassed 1 billion, with 80 per cent of the viewers outside the U.S. YouTube also boasts that its site reaches more people between the ages of 18 and 34 years old — the "millennial" generation — than any cable network. That segment of YouTube's audience is a major reason why more than half its video clips are watched on mobile devices.
     
     
    Google's parent company, Alphabet Inc., doesn't disclose how much money YouTube is making, but RBC Capital analyst Mark Mahaney estimates YouTube's annual revenue has now reached $10 billion and is increasing by as much as 40 per cent a year. The growth makes YouTube "one of the strongest assets fundamentally on the internet today," Mahaney wrote in a research note earlier this week.
     
    STILL LACKING
     
    Despite its progress, YouTube has been slow in realizing its full potential, leaving it vulnerable to new challengers for viewer's attention, such as Facebook's Live video feature, says Edward Jones analyst Josh Olson.
     
    The problem, as Olson sees it, is that YouTube has had trouble persuading TV and movie studios to license more of their content on their site, something that that might have made YouTube as dominant in video as Google is in search.
     
    But YouTube could be on a major breakthrough, according to a report published earlier this month in The Wall Street Journal. Citing unidentified people familiar with the matter, the newspaper said Google had reached an agreement with CBS to include its network in a cable-like service called "Unplugged" that will debut on YouTube next year. Google is also negotiating for the rights to the Fox network, ESPN and NBC, among others, the Journal said.
     
     
    "The dam appears to be finally cracking" for even better content to come to YouTube, Olson said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead
    While Andrew Frye lay dying on the floor of a Super 8 motel room in Green, Ohio, in April, a party raged around him.

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony
    Like so many flings in the summer of 2014, the night Gable Tostee and Warriena Wright spent together began with a flirtatious exchange on Tinder. Their brief relationship would end not with fond memories, but in a death and accusations of murder.

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit
    An Indian-origin digital marketing consultant today said he was attacked five days after Britain voted to leave the European Union (EU) on June 23.

    Indian-Origin Man Speaks Out About Assault Post-Brexit

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj
    The baby's mother Aditi Chandak, who holds an Indian passport, had appealed to Ms Swaraj to extend the baby's stay in India so that they could celebrate Diwali in New Delhi.

    2-Month-Old Australia-Born Baby To Celebrate Diwali In India, Thanks To Sushma Swaraj

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India
    The US Agency for International Development (USAID) today announced the launch of a new initiative - 'Catalyst: Inclusive Cashless Payment Partnership'.

    US Launches Scheme To Drive Cashless Payments In India

    'Getting Old, Can't Hear You, Write To Me,' Obama Tells Protester

    US President Barack Obama has told a woman who protested against him at an event in Ohio to write a letter to him as he has grown old and cannot hear her.

    'Getting Old, Can't Hear You, Write To Me,' Obama Tells Protester