Home Marketers YouTube Is Invading The Living Room

YouTube Is Invading The Living Room

SHARE:
YouTube Brandcast

TV programmers have long looked down their noses at YouTube. User-generated content isn’t as premium as their prestige programming, or so their argument goes.

YouTube, for its part, has long attempted to pitch itself to advertisers as not only just as good as TV, but, in many cases, more effective.

At its Brandcast presentation on Wednesday, which was part of the upfronts, YouTube trotted out a host of creators with huge and loyal fan bases to make its case.

Kinigra Deon, for example, a YouTube creator who writes, produces and acts in her own short- and long-form films, has nearly 4 million subscribers. Last year alone, the videos on her channel generated 160 million hours of watch time – 70% of which happened on a connected TV, not a phone.

Views on CTV devices have grown more than 130% over the past three years, said Neal Mohan, YouTube’s CEO.

“Viewers watch more than 1 billion hours of YouTube on their TVs every single day – that number still blows me away,” Mohan said. “We are drawing audiences on the big screen because [creators] are the new Hollywood.”

YT vs. TV

The Hollywood reference was a pointed callback.

Mohan kicked off upfronts week with a column in The Hollywood Reporter on Monday contending that it’s time for creators to be eligible to win Emmys.

It’s an interesting premise and a not-so-subtle contention that YouTube creator content should be recognized as the equivalent of other living-room-level TV.

But what people choose to watch on a big screen might surprise you. (It surprised me.)

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

People are sitting on their sofas watching Shorts, apparently. According to YouTube, views of Shorts on CTV devices more than doubled last year.

And according to data released by Nielsen earlier this week, YouTube is the second-most-watched media distributor overall on TV, with 9.6% of all TV viewing time, behind only Disney at 11.5% and trailed by NBCU (8.9%), Paramount (8.8%) and Warner Bros. Discovery (8.1%).

“The way people watch is changing dramatically,” said Sean Downey, Google’s president of the Americas and global partners.

Redefining TV

As a counterpoint to YouTube’s braggadocio, the Video Advertising Bureau recently released research of its own (unsurprisingly not cited by YouTube during Brandcast), which found that Gen Z viewers are more influenced by TV and streaming content rather than content on TikTok, Instagram or YouTube.

And Gen Z shoppers are 51% more likely to buy clothing similar to what a character, actor or personality from “premium video content” wore versus YouTube content, according to the VAB, which contradicts the prevailing narrative that influencers drive sales.

Guess it all comes right back down to how one defines “premium” and even how one defines “TV.”

YouTube’s hope is advertisers will buy into its vision for “redefining TV,” as Mohan put it, with an emphasis on creators.

As part of its upfronts presentation, YouTube announced the expansion of its YouTube Select program, which allows brands to run against curated content lineups.

Advertisers will now have a takeover option via Select to buy out all the inventory against the top 1% of creator content on YouTube. More than 75% of YouTube Select campaign impressions ran on TV screens in the US during the first half of last year, according to Google.

YouTube also announced an AI-powered ad format for reach campaigns optimized for TV screens. The format repurposes an advertiser’s existing non-skippable ad creative on YouTube so they don’t have to produce new assets.

And, last up, YouTube rolled out branded QR codes for TV that incorporate a brand’s logo to help bolster awareness.

As much as people like to talk about the rise of shoppable TV, there hasn’t been all that much innovation in terms of interactivity beyond QR codes.

But people are scanning, Downey said. The number of people interacting with QR codes on a TV screen has doubled over the past year, he said, although he didn’t share a baseline number.

(Hear me out, though: Whatever happened to the lean-back experience?)

Must Read

play button with many coins isolated on blue background. The concept of monetization of the video. Making money on video content. minimal style. 3d rendering

Exclusive: Connatix And JW Player Merge To Create A One-Stop Shop For Video Monetization

On Wednesday, video monetization platforms Connatix and JW Player announced plans to merge into a new entity called JWP Connatix. The deal was first rumored in July.

HUMAN Raises $50 Million

HUMAN plans to build a deterministic ID from its tracking of more than 20 trillion digital signals per week across 3 billion devices, which will aid attribution for ecommerce.

Buyers Can Now Target High-Attention Inventory In The Trade Desk

By applying Adelaide’s Attention Unit scoring, buyers can target low-, medium- and high-attention inventory via TTD’s self-serve platform.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

How Should Advertisers Navigate A TikTok Ban Or Google Breakup? Just Ask Brian Wieser

The online advertising industry is staring down the barrel of not one but two potential shutdowns that could radically change where brands put their ad dollars in 2025, according to Madison and Wall’s Brian Weiser and Olivia Morley.

Intent IQ Has Patents For Ad Tech’s Most Basic Functions – And It’s Not Afraid To Use Them

An unusual dilemma has programmatic vendors and ad tech platforms worried about a flurry of potential patent infringement suits.

TikTok Video For Open Web Publishers? Outbrain Built It.

Outbrain is trying to shed its chumbox rep by bringing social media-style vertical video to mobile publishers on the open web.