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Google Shouldn't Let Viewers Get Out of Watching Ads on YouTube

By Catharine P. Taylor | Nov 12, 2009

Sometimes, I become convinced that the online advertising and media business is on a suicide mission, hoping to take the online video market with it. Or maybe Google just wants to kill a model or two and watch its competition fall by the wayside. Why? During the same week that the online media world is crowing about the fact that online video ads are growing, particularly when  they run before other video content, Google gets the bright idea to do a test on YouTube, in which some viewers will get a chance to skip past the ads that run before online video. (In industry parlance, this is known as a “pre-roll”.) In so doing, it will only be reinforcing the idea that users should be able to consume content with no strings attached — an idea that, as the newspaper industry can tell you — is simply unsustainable.

All I can say is, “For the love of God, Google! Don’t do it!”

Google claims it’s doing this test to see what kinds of users skip ads, and that the data it produces might even lead to advertisers to create ads that people don’t want to skip. I already know the answer to the question of what kinds of users skip ads: just about everyone, if it’s technically possible. As for whether the data this test reveals will help advertisers create better ads, what a silly idea. Advertisers have never set out to create ads that are by and large, lousy. If they were capable, en masse, of doing something better, they would have a long time ago. As with other industries, it just so happens that advertising and marketing is beset with bureaucracy, fear and loathing that produces more mediocrity than it does greatness. No amount of data is going to change that.

I don’t fear for Google when I fret about this test; as the king of search, it can, and does, treat YouTube as a test lab. Should this ad model cause any revenue loss at YouTube, it will be a mere flesh wound. Instead, I fret for Hulu, the broadcast TV business and all other more traditional enterprises that are starting to see real money in online video advertising. Teaching consumers that they don’t always have to watch the pre-roll, which virtually every site which uses pre-roll makes mandatory these days, will only sour the prospects of organizations that truly need the revenue. Next thing you know, all of those Hulu devotees, who are already whining over the possibility they might have to pay to watch video when and where they want, will start to complain about actually having to watch an ad before seeing their favorite show. Imagine!

Previous coverage of online video at BNET Media:

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years and is a frequent speaker at conferences about media and advertising. She posts daily to BNET Media, writes the weekly Social Media Insider column for Mediapost and also has her own advertising blog, Adverganza.com. Follow her on Twitter or subscribe to the BNET Media Twitter feed.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Links on Twitter: Google to let users skip pre-rolls, visualization of CNN’s traffic since 1995, draft logo for NYT’s Bay Area Blog

    Nieman Journalism Lab - 8 days 16 hours 39 minutes ago

    Google thinks it can make pre-roll ads on YouTube more valuable by letting users skip them http://tr.im/EJRH » As Phoenix daily folds, a diagnosis: too hasty in migrating from paid print copies to free to web http://tr.im/EKnr » Beautiful visualization of CNN.com’s traffic, 1995-2009 http://tr.im/EL0T (via @daringfireball) » Current TV...

  • Google Experiments with YouTube Ad Skipping

    Media Bistro - 9 days 10 hours 15 minutes ago

    Google will begin experimenting with allowing YouTube users to skip pre-roll ads in a test to give the company insight into types of ads that are skipped or viewed, profiles of users who engage in either action and types of ads that are most successful, Online Media Daily reported. The experiment will also seek to determine at what point during...

  • Gong! YouTube adds skip button for pre-roll

    Adotas - 8 days 12 hours ago

    ADOTAS - When I go to watch a video online and the pre-roll video loads up, my eyes roll to the right-hand corner and follow the timer, sighing as every second clicks down and I can view what I set out to view. I accept the pre-roll as part of the trade-off for accessing free content, but that doesn’t mean I have to like it. When I see a skip...

  • YouTube Tests Skip Button on Pre-Roll Ads

    Search Enging Watch - 9 days 13 hours 9 minutes ago

    Over at our sister site ClickZ, Zachary Rodgers has the news on a new YouTube test where a "Skip" button is added to some Pre-Roll ads . This would allow users to avoid watching advertisements before the video they've chosen to watch. YouTube hopes the test will lead to more creative ads. But this also could be a step towards performance...

  • YouTube Pre-Roll and Cost-Per Engagement

    Screenwerk - 9 days 10 hours 25 minutes ago

    The other day I was surprised to see a Geico car insurance commercial (couldn’t find today) as pre-roll on YouTube. But now I understand it’s part of a test program that allows users to skip the ads to see which ones are working. In most pre-roll video ads you cannot bypass the commercial (think Hulu) and are compelled to sit through the...

 
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  •  
    1

    RushedLimbaughed

    11/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Google Shouldn't Let Viewers Get Out of Watching Ads on YouTube

    You must either work for CBS, NBC, ABC or Fox...or maybe it is Comcast?

    Newspapers should give their content for free, but TV should charge for content? You should try to get your story straight with Weir.

  •  
    2

    Cathy Taylor

    11/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Google Shouldn't Let Viewers Get Out of Watching Ads on YouTube

    Hey Rush,

    Really not quite sure where you get the idea that I think newspapers should give away their content. The problem is that that cat is out of the bag. We've all been taught that online newspaper content should be free. Sad, but true.To wit:

    http://industry.bnet.com/media/1000907/the-problems-with-walter-isaacsons-newspaper-rescue-plan/

    As online video is still young, compared to online newspapers, maybe there's a chance that people will learn to pay for it. (I did an extensive comment on this after another one of your comments, so I'm not going to go into great detail here.)

    In addition, most print news is a commodity. Video, particularly entertainment video, less so. If you want to watch "Seinfeld" you want to watch "Seinfeld". You're not going to shrug your shoulders and say, oh well..."Seinfeld" is charging so I guess I'll go watch "Full House."

    As for me and my colleague David Weir, we think independently, which is part of the fun of having multiple people on this blog. How boring it would be if we agreed on everything.

    Cathy

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