Posts Tagged ‘platform providers’

Online Video Takes a Hit, YouTube Soars

February 11th, 2010

It was announced earlier today that Veoh, an early YouTube competitor, is closing it’s doors for good. After a few failed attempts to breathe some life into the online video portal, the company announced that the remaining staff has been let go and they will be filing for chapter 7 bankruptcy.

It’s interesting to see the reaction across the Twittershpere, some saying this is a big hit to the Online Video space in general, but I beg to differ. The space, in general, is as healthy as can be with comScore reporting our strongest month yet with over 33 Billion video streams served in December, and more than 177 Million unique viewers watching for an average of 4.1 minutes each. Staggering. We saw Hulu hit the Golden Arches serving over 1 Billion in December taking a distant second spot to YouTube.

The hit is not to the space in general but rather to portals directly and to be honest, this isn’t really a “hit” per se but rather a sign of maturity in the market. Anyone taking on the giant known as YouTube is looking for a fight. Not only was YouTube a dominant force in OV to begin with, but then they were bought by Google making them almost impenetrable. I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with taking on the big dogs, it’s a healthy attitude actually but no one has been able to really improve upon the model yet and that’s kind of the point; either build something unique that the world needs or build something that already exists, better.

As I’ve stated before, I think the next 12-18 months are going to prove interesting for our beloved space especially in the Online Video Platforms. It’s my contention that we will see some shutterings, and some mergers all while the space continues to catapult through the Stratosphere. There is already some M&A action occurring, like Kit Digital who recently gobbled up The Feedroom and who is rumored to be engaged in further acquisitions in the coming months. And there are a few other exciting rumors flying around the OVPs as we speak.

Veoh shutting down is sad to see especially considering the fact that they’d come so far, garnering millions of users and spending over $70 Million in the process. But change is good, and hopefully someone will purchase Veoh’s assets and do something good for the industry as a whole with them. Change is inevitable in such a dynamic space and we shouldn’t take every fluctuation as a sign of weakness.

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No Slow Down in Online Video

July 16th, 2009

quicktv_joostThe numbers are staggering, I think everyone is aware of the 16.8 billion videos viewed in America in April 2009 according to comScore. Obviously the majority of this is driven by leg-snapping skateboarders and hyperactive kids with high pitched voices on YouTube but what’s much more interesting is that while millions of Americans waste so much time on these UGC videos we’re also seeing real business growth in the online video platform space, during an economic downturn and while VCs are drying up. Online video platform providers are still coming out of the woodwork to support real online video business.

In the past few weeks we’ve seen at least two new entrants into the sector including one business model switch by Joost, and a slick new offering from newbie, Quick.tv. To date Joost’s offering has been all talk, no product yet but they’ll hopefully do a good job of it considering the fact that they’ve got a lot to prove. On the other hand Quick.tv enters the space having learned from the “vets” like Brightcove, Ooyala, and Twistage whom have paved the way for newbies via trial & error, and good ol’ hard work allowing platforms like Quick to emerge out the gates with a robust offering including all the basics; upload, encode, storage, playback topped off with hand-built and customizable (by the user) interactive ads and promotions, multiple encoding rates, and collaboration, all in a clean drag and drop bundle. Is any of this new or groundbreaking? No. And this is not a piece about Quick.tv but rather a moment of excitement driven by a passion for the OVPP space in seeing growth and a thoughtful approach.

Point is, as mentioned in a previous post, the space is getting crowded and is increasingly confusing but couple a high demand product with smart people and you begin to see some clarity coming to the sector in the form of conferences, the Online Video Platform Summit, Platform Roundtables hosted by StreamingMedia, and engaging content from ReelSEO, VideoNuze, OnlineVideoWatch, KlessBlog, FierceOnlineVideo, etc. I also think we’re going to see more specialization like Wistia’s online video platform offering with a focus on internal collaboration and productivity.

The excitement mounts as we emerge from our infancy into wobbly-legged toddler-hood well equipped with abundant energy and a wildly hopeful outlook. Just take a look at the recent Twitter activity level from @kaltura.

Long live OV!

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The Online Video Platform Space is Getting Crowded

July 10th, 2009

Platform ProvidersFortunately there’s still plenty of opportunity for the 70+ platform providers, and counting, to garner new business. The Small Medium Enterprise space alone is a $3.5 Billion dollar market and there are hundreds of millions of web sites that need video today. If you’re doing business on the Internet and don’t have video on your web site in the next 18 months then you’re in trouble. The online video story is just too compelling; increased site stickiness, longer stays, more page views, increased user engagement, not to mention new revenue streams and marketing tactics.

Pete Wylie calls for insight into the second half of 2009 for online video and has a nice summary of first half activity in the space. What will happen in the next 6 months of OV? You bet viewing trends will continue to climb from an all-time high in April of 16.8 billion views, and that businesses will continue to add video to their sites at a break-neck pace. But with the economy still in disarray will we finally see some thining of the heard in the platform space or will businesses keep changing their business models to the one area that is still seeing funding and is or quickly approaching profitability?

We watch the Online Video Platform Providers closely and have a real passion for the space. Stay tuned for more niche insight on the OVPP sector.

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