YouTube will likely have the same look and feel once Google takes over. Their corporate offices will remain in San Bruno, California, and no one will be laid off. However Google will begin incorporating advertisements into YouTube – the typical non-intrusive ads that Google has been known for.
“With Google's technology, advertiser relationships and global reach, YouTube will continue to build on its success as one of the world's most popular services for video entertainment.” Google stated in a press release.
How much does Google's video aspect grow? According to comScore, it's quite substantial, yet not quite the blockbuster some are making it out to be.
“While one research company has touted market share of visits to a few online video sites as a key metric with which to evaluate the transaction (reporting that YouTube has a 40 percent market share), comScore considers this to be misleading, especially when evaluating the impact of Google's acquisition. Analyzing the transaction using share of visits suggests that all visits to video sites are equally valuable - but how can that be true? For example, one visit might result in only one video stream being viewed, while another visit can result in 20 video streams being viewed. With the potential to insert an ad in every stream, clearly all visits are not of equal value when considering the advertising potential of any site that offers streaming video. The problem is compounded if market share is measured only within a few select sites and not across the entire Web.”
Self-glorifying intentions aside, comScore brings up an interesting point. In other words, it may be true that YouTube draws in a significant amount of traffic, but what good is that traffic if a small proportion actually downloads videos? According to comScore, the following chart represents the breakdown of the top video website market share:
A = Unique U.S. Streamers
B = Streams Initiated by U.S. Users
C = Share of Total Internet Streams
D = Streams per Streamer.
| A | B | C | D |
|
| Total Internet | 106,534 | 7,182 | 100% | 67.4 |
| Yahoo! Sites | 37,934 | 812 | 11% | 21.4 |
| MySpace | 37,422 | 1,459 | 20% | 39.0 |
| YouTube | 30,538 | 649 | 9% | 21.2 |
| Time Warner Network | 25,675 | 258 | 4% | 10.1 |
| Microsoft Sites | 16,227 | 156 | 2% | 9.6 |
| Viacom Digital | 14,077 | 322 | 4% | 22.9 |
| Google Sites | 7,520 | 60 | 1% | 7.9 |
| Ebaums World | 7,143 | 67 | 1% | 9.4 |
| MLB | 6,442 | 30 | < 1% | 4.6 |
| ROO Group Inc. | 5,841 | 186 | 3% | 31.9 |
As we see from the chart, YouTube is the #3 site in terms of traffic. However the share of those who download is actually smaller than Yahoo! and MySpace. The incorporation of Google however will, by comScore's calculation, increase Google's presence by 'ten fold.'
Google isn't run by morons, and the risk of potential lawsuits had no doubt been calculated and recalculated immeasurably. Google's biggest risk may not be potential lawsuits, but whether their advertising campaign will be successful.