Facebook gaining ground on YouTube in video ads
Facebook is gaining ground on Google's YouTube as an
outlet for big companies to market their products via online videos, a
report published on Monday said.
The competition for
video viewers opens up a new front in the clash between the two web
giants that already compete in other types of advertising given their
appeal to young and international consumers, Ampere Analysis said in a
study.
London-based Ampere predicts a new advertising
"arms race" between the two rivals, neck and neck in terms of audience
sizes with around 1.4 billion to 1.3 billion monthly active users,
respectively for Facebook and YouTube. That means consumers are likely
to be forced to see more ads, but also enjoy a richer range of video
programming as a result, it said.
Online video is now
growing faster than any other digital category or subcategory, rising
33 percent in 2014, and is forecast to grow 29 percent a year through
2017, separate research by ZenithOptimedia said on Monday.
Ampere
Analysis argues that Facebook is morphing from a platform most
advertisers use for building general brand awareness to one that can
deliver "pre-roll" advertisements that marketing companies prefer for
ensuring their messages are actually viewed.
Currently,
YouTube remains a more flexible marketing platform, offering
advertisers the full range of video ads which run before, during or
after a video programme is shown.
"If the social
network's own video ambitions are to be realised, and if it is to
convince content owners it is a viable alternative to YouTube, it must
deliver comparable returns," Ampere Research Director Richard Broughton
said.
Differences in ad formats translate into the
rates the Internet platforms can charge advertisers. While YouTube
charges advertisers when an advertisement has been viewed, Facebook
offers the less advertiser-friendly model of charging once three seconds
of the video have been delivered, Ampere noted.
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