Facebook Hits 8 Billion Daily Video Views

Facebook Hits 8 Billion Daily Video Views, Doubling From 4 Billion In April

http://techcrunch.com/2015/11/04/facebook-video-views/

Facebook video viewership is growing by leaps and bounds. It now sees 8 billion average daily video views from 500 million users. That’s up from just 4 billion video views per day in April.

Even at just 3 seconds per view, Facebook is generating 760 years of watch time each day. That means there’s a ton of space for Facebook to lure in TV commercial dollars that are shifting to digital. It also has an opportunity to grow viewership further with an ongoing test where it pays a revenue share to top video creators.

The new stat explains why Facebook is running a ton of experiments on how it can get users to watch more videos after the discover one. It’s testing a Suggested Video interface on web and mobile the recommends additional clips to watch based on all the information Facebook knows about people. It’s this personal data that could give Facebook an edge in discovery as it competes with YouTube.

Facebook is also testing a dedicated video feed where people can browse different channels of videos shared by friends, trending on Facebook, and other themes. The team told me they could imagine this interface one day allowing users to have a lean-back Facebook video watching experience on smart TVs.

Other tests include picture-in-picture viewing so users can keep watching a video while they browse the News Feed, and more prominent option to Save a video to watch later.

Essentially, Facebook is showing premium videos from a limited test group of top creators in its Suggested Videos reel. If those videos gets users to sit through more video ads, Facebook will pay out a percentage of that ad revenue to the creators.

The company aims to connect users and help them share what they care about. Video is becoming the top way to share. That’s in part because the vivid format is aided by the proliferation of mobile phones with powerful video cameras, expansion of storage on these phones and computers, and faster mobile networks to upload and watch these videos. Facebook thrived by embracing photos back around 2005, and now it wants to ride the video wave.

And in terms of revenue, video ads command the highest rates. They leave such a strong impression that advertisers are willing to pay Facebook top dollar. If Facebook just jammed these videos into the feed, users would be pissed. But by growing organic video viewership, Facebook is able to subtly insert ads without ruffling too many feathers.

COO Sheryl Sandberg today said that 1.5 million small and medium-sized businesses shared videos in September. Some likely paid to turn those videos into ads to get more views. And considering average ad revenue per user in the US shot up 50% this year, the video ad strategy is working.

In the end, Facebook wins if it can become a destination to watch video or just a place people get sucked in to watch. That will let Facebook defend against other video-focused platforms hoping to steal attention while also earning more money to fund its future gambits like the successor to video — virtual reality.

All that video, and with more coming, means one thing: Faster networks at higher bandwidth. When the delivery mechanism impacts the revenue mechanism (those highly lucrative ads) you can bet Mark Zuckerberg isn’t going to chinch out on their infrastructure costs. Plus, with VR coming as the next successor to video we can expect another swing up and to the right with respect to network and bandwidth needs.

Best,
–Kevin
Long INFN, and recently long FB

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