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Guest post from AWALFormats rule everything around us. Thumbnail dimensions dictate how we engage with music’s visual identity in 2019, just as vinyl’s max storage capacity once defined ‘proper’ album length. Put another way, if the Siris and Alexas of the world can’t tell curious users who produced a song upon request, a generation might appreciate producers less than they could have. Views (more precisely, the way the YouTubes and Instagrams of the world define views) belong in the same boat.Play counts indicate reach and, in many instances, generate royalties for rights holders. When public, they become social currency, functioning as heat checks. Validation. Invitations for the uninitiated. Someone scrolling through their feed might come across 10 videos in 60 seconds. Might a Twitter user stop their thumb to take a better look at mind-bending animation or watch an adorable puppy meet a baby tiger? 100%. That said, the number associated with each clip has its own gravitational pull. When we come across a post with 2.3 million views, we want to see what’s up — the digital equivalent of a Stanley Milgram experiment. If you’re walking down a city street and see 100 people all looking in the same direction, odds are you will too. Basically, attention yields attention, which means it’s a big deal that the biggest hubs for video consumption don’t agree on how much attention is needed to trigger one view. The minimum watch time required varies. These format parameters impact just about everything: the money visuals make, recommendation algorithms, and any opportunity that impressive digits help unlock. Imagine walking into a meeting with a DSP and proudly pointing to the 300,000 IG views your mini music video garnered as proof that you’re rising fast. Now imagine Facebook suddenly changing the minimum required watch time on Instagram from three seconds to five seconds. Your views drop 40%, and your case isn’t as convincing as it was moments ago. Such a random policy shift probably isn’t in the cards for a massive social network, but the point remains: Know the rules that govern the success of your work so you can use them to your advantage. Innovation happens when talented people turn formats into playgrounds.Simple Steps to Apply This to Marketing1). Turn the minimum required viewing restrictions into creative challenges to structurally tailor visuals to different platforms: e.g. dynamic intro cards, front-loaded supercuts, striking closeups, or meta devices — turning the running time into a message to the viewer (“You’ve been watching for X seconds”), or ‘puncturing’ the smartphone viewing experience (the illusion of shattering glass).
- At least 10 seconds (YouTube Analytics won’t track anything shorter)
- An algorithm calculates the number of views to report and publicly display by aggregating ‘quality’ views and discarding the opposite, e.g. non-human sources.
- Views can come from native sessions and all embedded sessions (whether someone watches a video on YouTube or on a website that features a YouTube video)
- At least 30 seconds (if video is 30 or more seconds long)
- The entire video (if video is at least 11 seconds long and less than 30 seconds long)
- At least 50% of the video must be visible on your screen
- These ads contribute to public view counts and do trigger royalty payments to rights holders. However, YouTube recently banned TrueView plays from contributing to their music charts.
- The instant someone clicks an ad to play it
- At least 50% of the video must be visible on your screen
- These ads contribute to public view counts and do trigger royalty payments to rights holders. However, YouTube recently banned TrueView plays from contributing to their music charts.

- At least three seconds
- Videos must be 100% visible on your screen
- At least three seconds
- Repeat views do not count
- Self-views count only the first time you watch your own video
- Videos must be 100% viewable on mobile
- Views only come from native, in-app sessions.
- The instant someone opens a story
- The instant someone joins
- At least three seconds
- Videos must be 100% viewable on desktop and at least 50% viewable on mobile
- Views can come from native sessions and all embedded sessions (whether someone watches a video on Facebook or on a website that features a Facebook video)
- The instant someone opens a story
- Views must be 100% viewable on mobile
- Views only come from native, in-app sessions.
- The instant someone joints a session, they contribute to the viewer count
- The instant someone with an account connects to a session’s chat, they are added to the viewer list