Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Google expands YouTube videos

Google will begin showing YouTube videos on thousands of other websites. Read more….

Google expands YouTube videos to 1,000s of websites

BEIJING, Oct. 9 (Xinhuanet) -- In an effort to cash in on its 1.76 billion U.S. dollar purchase of YouTube 11 months ago, Google Inc. will begin showing YouTube videos on thousands of other websites. Google already shows some video ads on clips on YouTube's own site.

The ads accompanying the outbound YouTube clips won't be in a video format. Instead, they will appear as a graphic straddling the video or as a link along the bottom.

Mountain View-based Google began showing ad-supported YouTube videos on a handful of websites earlier this year. Now, it's reaching out to its entire "AdSense" network — an array of large and small Web publishers. But Google won't be pulling clips from YouTube's entire library, which includes a multitude of wacky segments contributed by amateur videographers. The material sent to other Web sites will be confined to video from providers who sign consent forms.

If the broader distribution of video pays off, it could encourage Google to distribute other types of content, including news stories and audio files, across its vast network of advertising partners.

Until now, Google only had been delivering ads tied to the search requests and other content on the pages of its AdSense partners.

More than 100 video providers — mostly professionals — have agreed to allow Google to distribute their content. Initial participants include TV Guide Broadband, Expert Village, Mondo Media and Extreme Elements.

Google will share the ad revenue generated by the YouTube videos with the content provider and the Web site that shows the clips. Google, which doesn't break down its revenue-sharing arrangements, historically gives 60 to 80 percent of the money to its advertising partners.

2 comments:

  1. It's a good marketing strategy of Google by using the service of YouTube as YouTube is becoming popular amaong the internet user.

    ReplyDelete
  2. But YouTube still needs to improve technically.

    ReplyDelete