Sunday, February 9, 2014

Did you know YouTube has a Dirty Little Secret?

Brian Hazard = Color Theory
Brian Hazard
[Editor’s note: The following article contains excerpts from a post by Brian Hazard a recording artist from Huntington Beach, CA You can reach out to him and find out more about what he does on www.colortheory.com  We are sharing this public information with you freely as it has been freely presented o us at no charge. And if you would like to be a guest  writer, we invite you to simply contact us on our site www.hammermag.com, and just Say "I want to contribute my words" and tell us about you and how to contact you.]


Brian Hazard is a recording artist with eighteen years of experience promoting his ten Color Theory albums. His Passive Promotion blog emphasizes “set it and forget it” methods of music promotion. Brian is also the head mastering engineer and owner of Resonance Mastering in Huntington Beach, California.

Ever spotted a terrible video on YouTube with an inconceivably high view count? Of course you have. Would it make you feel better knowing that most of those “views” were completely automated and only lasted 30 seconds with the sound turned off?
Vagex (referral link), a hugely popular YouTube exchange platform, is largely to blame. Credits are so cheap that members sell 2000 views for $5 on eBay and Fiverr and still turn a profit. As countless “buy YouTube views” sites testify, the views are by real people, mostly in the US. Not the sort of people who actually watch the videos, much less pay for music, but they tend to leave that bit out.
If $5 is too rich for your blood, you can earn credits by downloading one of their free viewers and letting it “watch” videos for you in the background. 
Firefox Viewer
If you don’t have any videos of your own to promote, you can sell your credits back to Vagex directly. The current exchange rate is 26,730 credits for $1. That doesn’t cover the electricity cost of generating those credits, but clearly people are willing to do it, or the exchange rate would be more favorable.
Since the videos aren't actually watched, the views themselves won’t generate new fans, but…
Could Vagex still be useful as part of a larger promotional campaign?
 Their FAQ lists these benefits:
  • Greater perception of popularity
  • Your video will show up as suggested/related more often
  • Higher search rankings on Google and YouTube
  • In search results, people tend to choose videos with more views
Sounds reasonable to me, but does it actually work?
To find out, I paid $30 to allocate 100,000 credits to a new video, immediately after uploading it to YouTube.
Vagex Setup
For the purposes of this experiment, I left the view length at 30 seconds, selected 100 likes, and left the other options unchecked (subscribers, favorites, comments).
Vagex Start
I also announced the video on Twitter and via a $30 Promoted Post on Facebook. Despite the latter reaching 15,540 people, it only generated 71 plays on Facebook.
Status - Facebook
I could’ve taken the promotion further with an email blast and multiple announcements on multiple networks, but I didn’t want to draw attention to the phony view count. After nearly a month, I’ve still got credits left, but enough data to draw useful conclusions.
Vagex Results
YouTube Results
84,438 credits generated 21,545 views, minus whatever legitimate views occurred. The video averaged 900 views per day:
YouTube Views
In other words, it cost me 4 credits ($0.0012) per view. That’s 862 views for $1! That sounds like a lot, but Vagex explains in their FAQ that it typically costs 3-4 credits per view, so my results are typical.
What they don’t explain is why multiple credits are required to generate a single view. Maybe YouTube identifies and compensates for Vagex-generated traffic.
How many comments did those 21,545 views generate? Not a single one! Nor did the needle move on any other metric that I can track.
Viewer Retention
Viewer retention was dismal. Nobody made it past the first minute? One would hope that the fans watching on Facebook did, but their data is lost in a sea of fake views.
Which brings up another important point: Vagex hoses YouTube’s analytics, which could otherwise help you target further marketing efforts.
Conclusion: Vagex didn’t enhance my promotion at all, beyond the unmeasurable benefits of a higher view count.
To truly go viral, a video requires:
  • higher retention times
  • high quality backlinks
  • likes, favorites, subscriptions
  • comments from strong accounts
The video itself doesn't have the necessary ingredients to go viral anyway, but it serves as a nice backdrop for the remix, while reinforcing the lyric.
You may argue that my particular formula (30 second views, 100 likes, no subscribers/favorites/comments) is to blame, and you may be right! I’m sure there are more effective combinations. Maybe if I had selected 300 second plays at 10 credits a pop, I would’ve dominated YouTube and won a Grammy.
As an epilogue, I just allocated 5 comments to the video in my Vagex control panel, so the page wouldn't look so desolate. Instead of 5, I got 42 comments within the hour! Most were generic and spammy, and in no way applied to my video. Like all things Vagex, commenting appears to be completely automated.
Where do you stand? Is Vagex a deadly sin or a necessary evil? Are you going to try it? Would you admit it if you did? Let us know in the comments!

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