Plot Twist: YouTube Shorts Is The Comeback Kid of Short Form Video

Plot Twist: YouTube Shorts Is The Comeback Kid of Short Form Video

It’s been nearly three years since TikTok broke into mainstream popularity after receiving?2 billion downloads?in October 2020 – and it didn’t take long for competitors in the space to try to catch up.

Soon after TikTok’s rise to stardom, we were introduced to similar content styles through?Instagram Reels?and?YouTube Shorts.?Today, YouTube Shorts stands as one of TikTok’s largest competitors and dare we say, it's replacement.

While TikTok videos are viewed?1 billion?times per day, YouTube Shorts are hitting?30 billion views?per day as of Q1 of 2022.?

Between surpassing view rates and creating a recent?#DoItLikeBaby?partnership with Grammy-nominated rap superstar Lil Baby, it’s clear to see that YouTube is taking note of the growing popularity behind YouTube Shorts and is working hard to maintain it.

While YouTube Shorts may have begun as an idea inspired by TikTok’s popularity, its platform features (which differ from TikTok) are driving a lot of its traction starting with its newly launched monetization options.

Starting as early as 2023, creators on YouTube Shorts will be eligible to monetize their content on the platform. In doing so, creators will keep?45 percent?of the revenue made on each Short which is a huge chunk of change compared to what can be made on other platforms.

TikTok content creators can earn anywhere from a?few cents per view on their videos to hundreds of thousands of dollars?if?the videos include sponsored content from brand deals. There is no set percentage of revenue that users can earn on TikTok and because of that, many creators?loop in branded content?to get paid.

YouTube Shorts’ monetization model is still emerging and the success rates haven’t been calculated yet. However, considering the fact that the creator economy drives a?huge amount?of brand deals and ad spend – if YouTube Shorts ends up being more profitable then we all know where creators will likely transition to next.

While ad revenue on TikTok is expected to?reach?$10bn globally this year YouTube’s ad revenue is on track to do $28bn globally this year.?

According to Morgan Stanley??combined US ad revenue for TikTok, YouTube Shorts and Meta Reels is to?climb to $9.4bn?in 2023 versus an estimated $5.1bn for 2022.?

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Despite Google’s ad revenue, TikTok does still hold the?largest amount of ad revenue for short form video content?and that may be subject to change as YouTube Shorts continues to roll out its monetization features.?

When it boils down to it, creators and consumers alike are driving record breaking numbers on YouTube Reels. And just because the numbers behind YouTube Shorts’ success regarding ad spend are still in the works, that doesn’t mean the platform’s path to success is bleak.

Pulling in 30 billion views per day is a huge milestone for YouTube Shorts and if the company finds a way to keep these numbers consistent, it could easily replace TikTok as the world’s favorite short form video platform.

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Lynn Cude

Sr. Leader, Business Development & Sales | Leading Digital Strategy, Broadcast, Podcasts, OOH and Marketing Campaigns.

1 年

awesome Denis!

Jose Carlos Pacheco

Director of Monetization and OTT International Distribution

1 年

This is a conversation I've been having with contacts in the industry as the monetization date looms. I have a strong sense that there will a be a big shift in $ from traditional ads on landscape videos to Shorts once YouTube turns that on which will negatively affect traditional content companies (film, tv, etc) who have found YouTube to be a profitable platform over the years. On one hand we can expect a big influx of TikTok creators shifting their focus even more to YouTube where as this media co's won't be able to follow as quickly if ever due to their distribution business models. ??

Fergus Dyer-Smith

Building AI Workforces // Founder / CEO ?? // Surfer ??♂?

1 年

I’m convinced the largest video site x search etc will mean they’ll work it out

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