How do you scale something that decreases in value with every new customer it acquires? You can only pump so many fake video promotions into a market before it's completely saturated and people start to resent the constant assault of your ads. Not to mention the fact that every Tom, Dick and Jane with a camera is already pushing their own videos every chance they get.
Then there's this:
> “All [Jimmy Kimmel] had done was expose [the Double Rainbow] video to a couple hundred million people who would find this video interesting to them,” Debelov says. (Actually, [Kimmel] tweeted it to his 90,000 Twitter followers). “We’ve taken that process, and reversed engineered it. We can’t guarantee your video will go viral because it all depends on your content, but we can get it in front of a million, two million, half a million, whatever your budget is – we can get you in front of that audience.”
You've reverse engineered the power of celebrity? Highly doubtful. When a comedian with the clout of Jimmy Kimmel calls something the "funniest video in the world"[1], his fans are going to watch that video. When those same people see a video advertisement at the bottom of a blog post or in one of their mobile apps, they're going to ignore it. Hell, even celebrity has its limits -- Kimmel's suggestions would be ignored if he started posting random videos rather than specific links of his own choosing.
Anyone born after 1980 has been conditioned since adolescence to ignore online advertisements. It's gotten to the point where you have two choices: 1.) Make your ad so obtrusive that it might actually cost you users, or 2.) Don't infuriate your users, and settle for a CTR of .01% on a good day. I can only see this service reinforcing that conditioning.
So when you talk to journalists you never know what part of whole conversation they will highlight:) I am not a fan of this example too, i dont think it represents well what are we doing as a company, but a lot of them catch this since it corresponds with our catchy name.
the idea of our service is simply to get relevant videos in front the right audiences. as someone below correctly commented its essentially AdSense for Videos. since we dont have fixed ad units but rather offer API to developers its up to them how obtrusive/native they want to place it. so far we have seen both very abusive and very nice implementations when video was nicely integrated in some games natively.
Basically, there's two things at stake in creating a viral video:
1. content
2. distribution
We can't help our advertisers create good, engaging content, but we can help with distribution. We can get their video infront of people through our network of publishers, but if their video (content) sucks, it's not going to catch on.
We are not looking to become a solution for promoting viral videos. We are building a Google AdWords for video solution with distribution taking place on Facebook, Mobile Apps, blogs and sites.
When we were doing diligence on Virool we ran our own tests with the platform. We took one of our portfolio company's videos and Spent $300 promoting it. At the beginning the video had 15 views and 0 likes. We were able to finish the campaign in a day, and at the end there were 7322 impressions and 3000 views. Note that Virool only charges when a video has been watched for 30 seconds. The conversion of and impression to a 30 second+ view was above 35% for all of our campaigns and on mobile it was 70.32% (not that it mattered because you aren't charged on conversion of impressions).
The next day we had 5483 views, 28 likes, and 10 comments (almost all positive), without having paid for the incremental boost.
Your point about decreasing value and fake video promotions doesn't hold true with this test nor the experience of other customers. The views are not fake, they come from actual individuals who watch for 30 seconds from legitimate publishers. If they weren't then YouTube could strip a customer of their views as they did with Lady GaGa who lost 156mm views [1]. This hasn't happened once for Virool.
If you watch a video for 30 seconds it is highly doubtful that you are ignoring it. Virool doesn't do bottom of the page video pre-rolls that won't be seen but are counted as a charged view. If you are in an app, it seems odd that you would assume every user ignores a video for 30 seconds. You are correct that there will be plenty of people who do ignore, but as a Virool customer I am not getting charged when this occurs so it doesn't seem like a strong argument why their business is flawed.
Finally, you may feel that people after 1980 have been conditioned to ignore ads, but if companies like Facebook and Google are making billions in revenue from digital advertising, I doubt that marketers are shoving money their way if no one is looking at their ads. In 2012, US digital video advertising was estimated to be around $2.9bn out of a $37.3bn bucket for digital ad spend [2]. The market is still nascent and there is a continued shift of advertising dollars to online and mobile from the classic channels (print/tv/radio). The market isn't anywhere near saturated and I doubt it will be anytime soon.
I'm not doubting at all what you say as far as views, likes etc. I think, however, you are quite naive as far as Youtube deleting videos. Sure getting view counts in the millions in a day will get your video deleted but not 6k in a day. It would be nice if you could post the portfolio company's video so we could see if it had a viral nature to it.
Also, a video getting that many legitimate views in a day should have scored consecutive views in the following days - of course this is the nature of a video going viral.
Noticed some pretty bad complaints from customers on Techcrunch seemingly alleging click (or in this case play) fraud. Do you have anything yet in place to prevent play-fraud?
"Tried running some videos with Virool. Couple of things I didn't expect:
1. Even with very precise targeting, my entire $100 ad budget was eaten up right away. We're talking seconds - minutes.
2. I was charged for views after just a few seconds of starting the campaign, even though the video is several minutes long. Clearly they are not restricting charging to actual completed views. "
Good point. Google's reputation in part is based on the exhaustive mechanisms they have in place to combat click fraud and assure advertisers they're getting billed for quality. I remember once bringing their wrath down on me because of accidentally clicking on one of my own AdSense ads. Took me 9 months of grovelling to get my AdSense account unsuspended after that.
Virality used to be a mark of excellence for a video, some way of measuring success. Now that success is no longer a symptom but the actual goal the nature of videos and their promotion will change.
Just like email could be used to reach large numbers of people in a short time, spam attempted to destroy it.
Eventually this will devolve into 'video spam' where you'll be bombarded with links to videos in the hope that they will go viral. Fortunately the cost of producing any video is so large that this will dampen the flood but if there are companies that aim specifically for virality of content then that is a sure sign that we're about to see a shift.
Eventually viral videos will die out because too many impulses deaden the nerve and then another useful and nice to have thing will have been murdered. Virality is the mark of excellence of a successful meme, something that should work its own way because you showed it to a small number of people and they decided to reward your work with a reference and so on. Forcing virality by dumping a video in front of a large number of people will simulate the effects of virality by using a starting group large enough that the eventual effect will be indistinguishable from virality.
But it is not the same as virality. A viral campaign costs outside of the original production costs next to nothing and is proof you got it right. If you have to force virality you are actually saying that your video is not all that good.
So users of services like these should realize that they are essentially admitting their content is not the real thing.
It doesn't seem like the service involves virality at all, they just provide an affiliate network to serve videos on for a fee. Like a video version of AdSense. Am I missing something?
The service itself is not about virality, but their customers are people who want their video to become viral, and for a video to become viral it needs exposure to key figures, which you might reach using their 'AdSense' network.
Here key figures means people who are interested in your video, have the personality to share videos and are charming enough to have a following that enjoys them (and perhaps includes more key figures).
Also there Virool guys seem to have spend a rather large fraction of their seed finance on the video funny that sells their service :P
It's probably a seed round and not an A round from the terms the round was raised. Typically an A round comes with different terms like boards seats, lead investors, pro-rata right etc. Also A rounds are always priced rounds with stock issued. Seeds are normally not priced and instead debt (convertible note) is issued.
Not naive. The terms are in the midst of change. Hence the "quotes" in the article title.
Now that convertible notes are the dominant form of financing seed rounds, I usually see money raised with debt as seed, and money raised by issuing stock referred to as the A round.
I am really sick of people talking about the multitrillion markets they want to conquer.
So many startups calling that card.It's ridiculous!
"We will be successful because it is a 1000 trillion market".How about being realistic.It's just stupid.We all know nobody will get even close to a damn trillion.
I would rather divide 7 mil.$ between 10 good startups instead of 1 like this.
We have a company that enables your videos to go viral ... that don't have their own video that has gone viral to show their company to the world, but instead we learn from techcrunch.
It's a nice forced viewing platform making zynga and others very happy ;) view vid for 30sec and get some credits for FarmVille, exactly he audience everyone wants to reach. Typical non viral approach just Deliver numbers for reports ;) but big respect to the guys how they packaged it shiny and positioned it within the whole ecosystem. As filling out surveys or subscribing to newsletters or services like netflix in exchange for credits the user do not like any more...
They provide a nice solution to get something out of all this free app users who do not like to pay and this market is large. Something like 90 to 95 percent off all the players...
I am wondering what kind of valuation this company had got. To raise that amount of money I expect at least $12M post-money valuation (and still they have sold about 50% of the company for a seed round).
So, the question is what kind of mind-blowing traction they had?
I wonder if there's a way to hook this with amazon mechanical turk: pay a cent for a person to just open up youtube and watch a video. Then set up a network where people pay money for views, and profit from the spread.
Then there's this:
> “All [Jimmy Kimmel] had done was expose [the Double Rainbow] video to a couple hundred million people who would find this video interesting to them,” Debelov says. (Actually, [Kimmel] tweeted it to his 90,000 Twitter followers). “We’ve taken that process, and reversed engineered it. We can’t guarantee your video will go viral because it all depends on your content, but we can get it in front of a million, two million, half a million, whatever your budget is – we can get you in front of that audience.”
You've reverse engineered the power of celebrity? Highly doubtful. When a comedian with the clout of Jimmy Kimmel calls something the "funniest video in the world"[1], his fans are going to watch that video. When those same people see a video advertisement at the bottom of a blog post or in one of their mobile apps, they're going to ignore it. Hell, even celebrity has its limits -- Kimmel's suggestions would be ignored if he started posting random videos rather than specific links of his own choosing.
Anyone born after 1980 has been conditioned since adolescence to ignore online advertisements. It's gotten to the point where you have two choices: 1.) Make your ad so obtrusive that it might actually cost you users, or 2.) Don't infuriate your users, and settle for a CTR of .01% on a good day. I can only see this service reinforcing that conditioning.
[1] http://twitter.com/jimmykimmel/status/17665533038