BUSINESS BLOGS
BUSINESS BLOGS
category: business
06 Apr 2009

In November 2007, we published a piece called Online Video Distribution: The Race for #3 is On

Hulu wasn’t even around, so #1 was YouTube and #2 was MySpace TV.  Then came the usual suspects: Metacafe, DailyMotion, Break and Veoh.

Since then, Hulu has launched, gone from Clown Co. to media darling, to being called just another big bad media thug… but in the process, it has become a major player thanks to its stash of super premium content.

We define premium content as any made-for-web content that is professionally produced, such as our own content at WatchMojo.com.

We then define super premium content as television and theatrical content that is repurposed or published online.  Despite their resistance, super premium content owners such as Disney and Sony are seeing no choice but partnering with YouTube.

Having taken notice, CBS, who initially refused to join Hulu, bought CNET for $1.8B, obtained the TV.com URL and has now set its sights on clashing with Hulu for super premium video supremacy.  As a side note: wesupply videos to TV.com, Hulu and YouTube.

Meanwhile, YouTube continues to forge ahead, though rumor has it, its costs are spiraling out of control and turning it into a profitable business is becoming more challenging as every day goes by.  YouTube is in a thankless position:

- consumers want free videos
- it has to take on “Big Bad Media” when they file a lawsuit (how dare they, right, it’s their content!)
- oh, we also want someone else to foot the hosting bill for increasingly better quality video.

How do we thank them?  By calling them a monopolist.  Evil.  Or worse, heartless.  The last one came from us, but it was actually meant as a compliment.  Sort of.

What About the Rest?

Anyway, in the past 18 months since I wrote that first piece, more has changed:

YouTube, Hulu, TV.com have all made life for Break Media, Metacafe, DailyMotion and Veoh tougher and tougher. They made things nearly impossible by launching their own sites, however, and not acquiring them.  You see how with content, you can launch a new site (Hulu, Tv.com) and scale quickly if you have the resources.  By launching these sites and shooting up in the traffic rankings, they removed a lot of leverage these companies would have had in any M&A talk.

I should mention, we have partnerships with all of these companies as well, and to borrow an analogy from Fred Wilson, like any book/newspaper/magazine publisher wants to see bookstores or newspaper stands do well, we genuinely want these companies to grow in traffic and in revenue, but the truth is, you don’t need a gazillion aggregators, either.

YouTube’s success comes partially from the fact that it stayed one step ahead of the copyright issue and managed to literally aggregate all of the videos in the world (or close to it).  Hulu and TV.com will leverage their pedigrees to remain relevant and grow.

But there will be a shakedown amongst Veoh, Break, Metacafe and DailyMotion, unless they shift strategies or get some kind of differentiator.

Some would argue the shakedown has begun:

- Last week, sadly Veoh laid off more people. It will now focus on its toolbar, called Compass.  Here is a piece by Tech Crunch talking - and describing - Compass much better than one my one-line “it’s a toolbar” description.

- Break Media, in trying to avoid such a fate, seems to have taken a different strategy: producing, investing and acquiring content libraries… which I personally think makes sense. They just bought HBO’s Runaway Box.

Few of these companies will ever really become profitable businesses, I think, though one or two might cash out and exit, making some money for investors.  The challenge they face lies in demand and supply: too many similar offerings.

But by making a play for content, I do think that Break Media differentiates itself from the others enough to have some kind of premium or leverage in potential M&A talks, because a buyer would be getting everything else the others offer (traffic, technology, advertisers and content they not only have rights to, but actually own).

Please note, as a content producer, I am biased.  Readers of this blog know this all too well.  But the fact is, Break Media does get an edge here, ironic or fitting, since they are partially owned by Lions Gate, who owns a right to buy the whole piece.

Since Lions Gate owns the right to buy the whole company, then logic would suggest that Veoh, Daily Motion and / or Metacafe will also make a bid to own content libraries as a differentiator, as well, since they are actually sellable and “in play”.  I am not saying they are thinking of doing so, or will for sure, because the VCs that backed these aggregators were adverse to content to begin with… but the fact remains, in their quest for relevancy, it sure would be a hedge against obsolescence.

You are also going to see this with ad networks, as well.  AdConion bought Red Lever, I do expect over time for others to follow suite.

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