Step Aside, Creators. Brands Are Taking Over YouTube
The digital video world will converge on Anaheim, Calif., this week for the sixth annual VidCon, a three-day extravaganza that’s grown from 1,400 YouTubers and their rabid fans, to 20,000 strong, with top-tier creators from Vine, Vimeo, Tumblr and Meerkat, just to name a few. Some of the biggest brands on the planet will also be in attendance.
It’s no wonder. While about 90 percent of video viewing is still on TV, according to Nielsen, 18- to 34-year-olds—a demographic coveted by advertisers—are increasingly cutting the cord.
“It takes a very different media mix today to reach that audience than it did 10 years ago,” explained Jenny Schauer, media director at Digitas. She believes YouTube, and increasingly Facebook, are uniquely positioned to reap the rewards of brand videos. “Taking content from a brand and putting it right in front of consumers in the News Feed, that’s where Facebook is really strong.”
Meanwhile, at VidCon, YouTube will take its own well-deserved victory lap. An exhaustive study released today by video marketing firm Pixability digs into viewability, reach and growth of the top 100 global brands as determined by Interbrand (see above chart for the top five brands on YouTube and the top 100 global brands online (link is external)). The veritable treasure trove of data is a marketer’s dream: YouTube’s channels count 73 million subscribers, with subscribership up 47 percent year over year.
Full article available at http://bit.ly/1TLmI9U (link is external)