JOHN KEEHLER

I'm a strategist... working at R/GA. I teach at schools like CU, SMU, UTD and BDW. I speak about digital for organizations like the AMA, AAAAs and Ignite. I've been quoted publications like Brandweek, the Dallas Morning News and the Wall Street Journal. I've been blogging since 2004 under the site name "Random Culture."

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About me, what I've worked on, and what I'm interested in.

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Wednesday
Aug232006

How to Advertise on YouTube

Youtubelogo
Want to advertise on YouTube? Up until very recently, advertisers only had the following options:

  • Upload your own video
  • Run contextual ads through Yahoo, cross fingers
  • Become a movie studio or record label and try to get a "featured" video on the homepage
  • Spam the comments section of other people's videos

Needless to say, these aren't very attractive options for advertisers. YouTube wants to change that. They need the advertising revenue, but they want the ads to be relevant. This sentiment was echoed in a recent interview Charlie Rose conducted with the co-founders of YouTube, Chad Hurley and Steven Chen.

Yesterday, YouTube unveiled new options for advertisers. Here they are:

  1. Create Your Own Brand Channel
    This is basically a "custom" profile for the advertiser. "Custom", in this case, means a background image, a different color palette, and a graphic masthead. The Paris Hilton Brand Channel, from Warner Bros. Records, is one of the first. YouTube will actively drive traffic to these brand channels.
  2. Sponsor A Brand Channel
    As you can see from the above example, the Paris Hilton Brand Channel is actually sponsored by Prison Break. This is a great opportunity for advertisers to get involved that may not have any content to create a brand channel of their own.
  3. Participatory Video Ads
    This is a fancy way of saying a video ad that's able to play directly on the homepage. They're called "participatory" because users are allowed to rate, comment on and share the video, but that's what users are allowed to do on all the other videos on the site. One of the benefits is that these video ads are accompanied by some display advertising, such as a small banner unit above the video on the YouTube homepage and a larger 728x90 on the individual video page.

Parishiltonyoutube

Overall, I think the "brand channel" idea is really interesting. Small design elements allow advertisers to cut through the clutter by offering an experience that stands out. Actually, I think it would be smart move for YouTube to amplify the social networking aspect of their website to allow ALL users to customize the design of their profiles. It worked for MySpace, right? Update: YouTube does allow you to customize basic design elements of your profile, but the "masthead" on the Paris Hilton channel appears to be one of the things advertisers can do that the average user cannot.

You can read more about these new advertising options from YouTube in these articles from the Financial Times and Washington Post.

Links via Micropersuasion and Marketing Vox.

Reader Comments (2)

I see you say one of the options for advertisers previousy was to upload their own videos and I wasn't sure before that this was allowed - I'm going to browse through YouTube some more...

I'm fairly new on YouTube and I'm on this page because today read that some parents have made money through advertising after funny YouTube videos of their kids received millions of hits, but, even with your post, I'm still unsure how they are doing this, so am going to follow the link you provide for other weblogs, thanks!
July 22, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTeresa Schultz
The link just returns to this page. Where is the list of links to weblogs that reference advertising on YouTube?
July 22, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTeresa Schultz

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