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Facebook and YouTube overtake search engines in the U.K.

Experian Hitwise statistics show social networks attracted more traffic in May than search engines. Social networks accounted for 11.9 percent of U.K. Internet visits, compared with 11.3 percent of visits to search engines. Continue reading

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 Craigslist TV on YouTube – a real keeper

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Google takes the cricket, next stop Super Bowl?

When North Americans think of cricket they usually think of genteel English stereotypes like milky tea, cucumber sandwiches and warm beer served in village pubs. The reality couldn’t be more different. Cricket is the second most followed sport in the world with a fan base of over two billion people. Its broadcasting rights command big bucks, nowhere more so than in India, its commercial home. So when Google-owned You Tube bought the global rights to this season’s Indian Premier League cricket it was a significant development in the relationship between sport and the Internet – almost the equivalent of the web taking over the Super Bowl.

The IPL’s deal with Google gives You Tube the exclusive online right to show two six-week seasons of 60 games in every country bar the United States. While its value wasn’t disclosed, The Guardian revealed that the IPL originally sold its Internet rights to Dubai-based netlinkblue for US$50m over 10 years. That deal excluded netlinkblue from showing live games in markets where TV deals had already been struck; Google’s doesn’t. It takes it head-to-head with television networks in some markets (such as India and the UK where Sony and ITV respectively own TV rights) and gives it the sole right to matches show in markets where TV deals haven’t been struck. Revenue generated by advertising, shown throughout each game, will be split equally between Google and the IPL.

That Google is investing so much time and energy in India and its national obsession with cricket is big news in itself (not least because it’s in the process of pulling out of China over the Chinese government’s refusal to waiver over censorship).  But even more important is the potential this deal has to overthrow the pre-eminent role television, whether free-to-air or cable, has had in showing live sport ever since the first baseball match was broadcast back in 1931. From now on the most important thing a sports fan can have may well be a high speed Internet connection and not a cable subscription.

And sport is only the start of it. There’s nothing at all to stop Google from taking on traditional TV in other genres too: networks need only to look to newspapers to see just how quickly the Internet can overthrow the established order.

Getting back to the cricket, I logged on to You Tube’s IPL channel to catch a few overs of the season’s opening match between the Kolkata Knight Riders and the Deccan Chargers. Nine hundred thousand other people had the same idea, causing You Tube’s coverage to crash. It seemed even the most viral of videos gets nowhere near the number of hits a live game of cricket does.

But by game 2, You Tube was prepared so I managed to catch most of the Delhi Daredevils beat my team, the Rajasthan Royals. Other than the video quality being a bit shaky at times, it was no different to watching the coverage on my TV screen – only, for my wife, it came with the added advantage of not being subjected to sport, as she kept control of the TV remote.

Still, what she missed was history in the making – even if it was a game of cricket half a world away.

 

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YouTube mobile ads in US and Japan

The home and search results pages of YouTube’s mobile site will now serve up advertising, announced the YouTub Biz Blog. With a traffic increase of 160 percent in 2009, YouTube decided it was the right time to expand advertising opportunities from its Web site to its mobile site as well. Mazda was one of the first advertisers to jump on board. The ads are full-day banners, introduced after several months of testing. While it can be sold as a YouTube banner package, we’re not clear on whether a business can purchase mobile-only.

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Canadians love Google, games and Kijiji

Search engine usage constitutes 15 percent of all Canadian internet visits — and Google gets 80 percent of them. (Canadians use search engines 52 percent more than Americans and 20 percent more than Britons — so they’re either more inquisitive or more confused.) And what are Canadians searching for? “Games” (or “jeux” in French) was the number one non-branded term searched over 12 weeks up to June 27, 2009, according to a report from Hitwise, the Experian company recently expanding in Canada. (The report’s available by request.) Besides social networks, Facebook and YouTube in particular, Canadians are searching for shopping opportunities, particularly Kijiji, EBay and LesPAC. More evidence of the crucial importance of SEO and SEM…if you don’t know what those are, for goodness sake give us a call.

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Time Warner and YouTube in ad and content deal

Time Warner Inc. and YouTube just announced an online video distribution agreement that will give consumers access to an extensive variety of short-form content owned by Time Warner, including clips from movies, television shows and news programming. The agreement will allow Warner Bros. Entertainment and Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. to program videos on YouTube using a Time Warner embeddable player.

YouTube will host the content made available from a wide range of Time Warner-owned television shows and movies. In addition, Time Warner can create separate channels for its key participating brands and sell ad time on YouTube. Warner Bros. Entertainment and Turner Broadcasting will work with YouTube to offer packages of targeted advertising, supplemental marketing and branded channels. Time Warner’s properties will share ad revenue with YouTube.  YouTube also will feature Time Warner content in marketing and promotional campaigns, including display ads.

“This partnership with Time Warner will provide our community with some of the most popular video content produced,” said Chad Hurley, co-founder and CEO of YouTube, in the announcement.  ”We hope to build on this deal and look forward to a long and productive relationship.”

 

 

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