You’ve got video content. How do you turn it into cash?
You need video content. Where do you find it?
In the first of what is likely to be a flood of services, a company called ClipSyndicate has come up with a solution.
The system is simplicity itself…
Video publishers post their material. Web site owners search for it. When the owner finds something he was to put on this site, he contacts ClipSyndicate for the rights.
Currently, two kinds of deals are available:
1. Pay per view. The web site owner pays a pre-determined fee each time the video is downloaded.
2. Revenue share. The video comes with an advertisement. Web site owner gets 65% of the revenue, video owner gets 30%, and ClipSyndicate gets 5%.
Until now, video has been used mostly for entertainment, sales and education. Productions have been elaborate, expensive and relatively rare – and distribution costs significant.
Now… imagine a world where video is as common as paper… a world where it’s no big deal to put a short program together and the cost of distributing it is trivial.
How will our use of video expand in a world like this?
Here’s one example of a use of video I think we can expect to see a lot more of: detailed customer service videos.
I don’t know the company and I don’t know anything about the quality of their service, but if I were in the market for what they offer, this web hosting company would go to the top of my list.
Why?
Because they have a method for answering all my questions instantly in a way that I can easily understand. How rare is that?
In the new world of Internet net video, it might not be that rare at all. And that’s a good thing.
First the news… detailed analysis to follow in future posts.
As predicted on this blog last winter, Google is adding online video advertising to its pay-per-click arsenal – and it’s happening this week.
Here’s a super-short cheat sheet of what the service is going to look like:
1. It will be based on the winning pay-per-click model 2. The ads will appear as small, static boxes 3. The video plays only when the prospect clicks the static image
And here’s the kicker… Google will host the video.
(If there’s one group that has bandwidth to spare its the guys at Google!)
Here’s a undated handout from the company showing what the ads may look like:
Ken McCarthy
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So what did Hollywood do?
They grasped at straws like 3D movies.
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