BUSINESS BLOGS
BUSINESS BLOGS
category: business
19 Feb 2008

Daily Motion is escalating the battle for #3 in their space (after YouTube and MySpace TV).

Online video advertising is growing, quickly.

Online video advertising is where search advertising was in 2000-01: a major part of the web ecosystem desperately looking for a business model.

Unlike search - where traditional media companies failed to invest and even new media companies gave up in favor of portaldom - a lot of companies are vying for online video supremacy. My read on it is that we will never have a Google of video. That’s right, even YouTube - incidentally owned by Google - won’t command the kind of revenue within its segment that Google does. The reason for that is lack of competition and monetization ability. On the former, YouTube has a lot of competition in the monetization race.

Either way, looking at the stats, the numbers are impressive:

An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2009 - set in 2004: $657 million | Source.
An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2009 - set in 2005: $1.5 billion | Source.
An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2010 - set in 2006: $2.3 billion | Source.
An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2010 - set in late 2006: $3 billion | Source.
An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2011 - set in 2007: $4.3 billion | Source.
An estimate of the Worldwide online video ad market for 2011 - set in 2007: $10 billion | Source.
An estimate of the US
online video ad market for 2012 - set in late 2007: $7.1 billion | Source.
An estimate of the US online video ad market for 2012 - set in early 2008: $6.6 billion (all broadband at $12.2B) | Source.

It’s thus not surprising to see the sheer volume of money that is being invested in the space, here is an incomplete snapshot:

Judging from that, investors better be patient because only YouTube has exited, handsomely, to the tune of $1,650,000,000 (that’s $1.65B, in case you’re wondering). I’d like to remind everyone that more money does not equal more return, but I digress.

It’s worth noting, too, that YouTube raised less money than everyone else in its peer group but I highly doubt anyone in that group will be worth more, ever, than YouTube.

I am personally hoping that WatchMojo.com pulls the same feat in its peer group. I won’t say “jokes aside” because I am not exactly kidding, admitting that yes, indeed, we’ve raised - and spent - less than $5M to build our content and distribution, which is actually bigger than some of our peers. You might notice that I do not call the players in our group competitors because we are the bastard children of the broader video space: everyone is betting heavily on platforms and user-generated content and our category is definitely going against the grain.

Lastly, I think most of these players are pricing themselves out of exits:

- IPOs will be very hard: yes online advertising is growing quickly but I suspect traditional media (that owns rights to the content) will garner a big share of the online video ad pie. In this context, hitting $100M in revenues or more becomes very challenging, especially with the low-quality content most of these sites are trying to monetize.

- M&A becomes nearly impossible because you need to sell for more than you have raised, and judging by Revver’s fate (who raised $12.7M and sold for less than $5M) that becomes quite hard.

It’s a good thing I am no low-expectations mofo… just because we have not raised boatloads of cash (yet anyway) does not mean we’re not gunning for a big payday one day, but realizing that such a day might not materialize tomorrow, I respectfully think a lot of the companies in the broader video space and our content creation space in particular have dug too deep of a hole for themselves.

To each their own.

This is a work in progress, I am adding CMS platforms (Brightcove, Maven, etc.) and CDNs (Limelight, Akamai, etc.) as we speak. If you have more companies and funding amounts, or if I made a typo, leave the correction in the comments or email me at ash@mojosupreme.com.

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category: business
17 Aug 2007
related tags: Video | Search Wars | Google | TW AOL | Truveo |

Last year, Truveo shelved its consumer aspirations and became a B2B provider of video search technologies to other sites.  In hindsight, that was a good move.  Problem, in hindsight, is that a lot of smaller and newer video search services have popped up.

I realized this some time ago and with the help of our IT team built a video meta search engine, you can check out an example of how it works here, for example, it’s the results for a search of George Bush.  The idea is simple:

- a lot of more resourceful companies will pour billions in developing video search

- the PageRank moment of video search has yet to materialize

- we’re developing a video watching audience at WatchMojo.com, why stop there, why not give them the best of the web via meta search?

- this allows us to partner with many of the sites that index our content (ie. Blinkx) and allows us to feature them back.

- unlike meta text search where the meta engine bypasses the underlying search engine, in video, we effectively send the underlying engine traffic…

All to say, Truveo realized the err of their ways and yesterday launched a consumer destination.  This makes sense because as part of Time Warner’s AOL, Truveo can have massive distribution overnight… and we know how distribution is everything in search.

While it’s not too late to become relevant in video search, time is ticking.  I’ve said all along, the war for the winners of video advertising remains to be fought, but it sure is getting crowded in the

- video ad network
- video search engine
- video file sharing
- video destination
- etc.

space…

Yes, as a content producer, I’m very biased, but I can play with all of these companies while all of these companies will have to fight with one another.

- Has the “Bubble Pocket” Moved from Video Sharing Sites to Video Ad Networks?

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