YouTube is increasingly under fire from labels and other creators upset over the size of its payments to creators. A new study reveals details of this payment gap between YouTube and every other streaming service, free or paid.
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"Advertising supported platforms like YouTube are important to the music eco-system and music rights-holders should be grateful for their consumer reach and investment in label tools like Content ID," says Jason Peterson, GoDigital Chairman. "However there is a gap between what paid music streaming services and free ad-supported services like YouTube (and Facebook) deliver in terms of revenue per stream to music rights-holders."In August 2017, YouTube Global Head of Music Lyor Cohen publicly stated that YouTube delivered a $3.00 CPM to music rights-holders. But a public survey of the YouTube by GoDigital found that only about 40% of video playbacks have an advertisement served, leaving 60% of video streams are unmonetized. Therefore, the effective CPM (eCPM) in the US based on all video streams is $1.20, not $3.00. YouTube vs Spotify
- In data sampled for August 2017 in the United States, GoDigital found that Spotify had an ad supported eCPM of $2.11 and a paid subscription eCPM (revenue/1000 streams) of $6.19. Therefore Spotify is paying approximately 75% more than YouTube for its advertising supported model and 515% more for paid streaming.
- Since the majority of Spotify users are free ad supported users, Spotify had a blended (free and paid) eCPM of $3.01 in the United States in the data sampled – more 2.5X the rate that YouTube pays.
- Apple Music has no free tier and thus its eCPM is higher at $6.38 for the service
Download the Solutions to the YouTube Value Gap study v4.2.pdf here (62.8K)
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