YouTube Money! - Tajirika na YouTube!!

Steve Dii

JF-Expert Member
Jun 25, 2007
6,402
1,254
Hii kitu wameanza majaribio kitambo kidogo kimepita. Hivi sasa wameamua kushirikisha "watu wote." Ni wakati wa kutumia ubunifu kujipatia 'tupesa' kwa wale walioko Marekani kwa sasa!!

Tafadhali soma zaidi hapa chini:
In the future, everyone will monetize their 15 minutes

Tuesday, August 25, 2009 | 11:00 AM

We first launched the YouTube Partnership Program (YPP) to help some of our more popular users make money from their videos on YouTube. While we've focused on accepting prolific users who regularly produce videos that reach a wide audience — like Fred and ValsArtDiary — we've occasionally extended the program to include some of the site's more unforgettable videos, such as the Battle at Kruger, David after dentist and Otters holding hands. These individual video partnerships recognize the role popular "one-off" videos play on YouTube, and have helped many people earn thousands of dollars a month as their videos went viral and endured over time.

We decided it was time to spread the wealth. Today we're excited to announce that we're extending the YouTube Partnership Program to include individual popular videos on our site. Now, when you upload a video to YouTube that accumulates lots of views, we may invite you to monetize that video and start earning revenue from it. To determine whether a particular video is eligible for monetization, we look at factors like the number of views, the video's virality and compliance with the YouTube Terms of Service. If your video is eligible for monetization, you will receive an email and see an "Enable Revenue Sharing" message next to your video on the watch page, as well as in other places in your account:

Once you've chosen to enable revenue sharing, YouTube will sell advertising against your video and pay you a revenue share into your Google AdSense account each month. (If you don't have an AdSense account, you'll have the opportunity to create one.) Individual video partnerships will not be eligible for many of the benefits of user partnerships, like enhanced channel features or the ability to monetize other videos in your account, so we encourage you to apply to be a member of the YPP. We'll consider your individual video partnerships when reviewing your YPP application. For now individual video partnerships are available only in the United States, but we hope to roll these out internationally soon.

It's taken us some time to build out the YouTube Partnership Program, our content management tools and other infrastructure to handle expanding the YPP to so many individual users and videos. Now that we're ready to share these opportunities with a wider audience, we're excited to see how individual video partnerships will help even more people make money from their success on YouTube.


Posted by Shenaz Zack, Product Manager
Source link: http://ytbizblog.blogspot.com/2009/08/in-future-everyone-will-monetize-their.html

YouTube to share ad money with viral videos
One-off vids allowed into partnership program

By Austin Modine in San Francisco

Posted in Music and Media, 26th August 2009 18:50 GMT

YouTube plans to turn more skateboarding dogs (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQzUsTFqtW0) into cash by selling ads for the creators of one-off viral videos.

Since 2007, YouTube has invited users who produce a steady stream of popular clips to become "partners (http://www.youtube.com/partners)" in its advertising program. Once a content creator is accepted into the program, Google begins pitching overlaid and banner advertising slots, and gives the user a cut of the profits.

Now YouTube says it will begin accepting anyone with a red-hot clip into the program - assuming the website thinks it can drum up some revenue.

YouTube product manager Shenaz Zack explains the criteria in a blog post (http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/08/in-future-everyone-will-monetize-their.html): "To determine whether a particular video is eligible for monetization, we look at factors like the number of views, the video's virality and compliance with the YouTube Terms of Service."

If the video complies with YouTube's secret recipe, the user is emailed an invitation into the program and given an "enable revenue sharing" option on their account page. YouTube doesn't say how much revenue is shared with partners, but suffice to say most folks shouldn't quit their day job even if their cat has a remarkable talent for complacency while its paws are batted against a piano (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J---aiyznGQ).

It's always been difficult for YouTube to sell custom advertising for home-made viral videos because the the clips are often nothing advertisers want anything to do with. YouTube's new scheme, at least, will allow the website to easily pick and choose what it thinks is marketable.

YouTube said its advertising partnership for individual videos is available only in the United States for now, but hopes to extend the program internationally in the near future. ®
Source link: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/08/26/youtube_expands_ad_partnership_program_to_single_vids/

SteveD.
 
Ok,SteveD;ila ni kwa USA kwanza.Ama kweli charity begins@home,sijui na mimi nianzishe ya kwangu!!Anyway,ikianza kufanya kazi Internationally naomba unijulishe if you don't mind.
 
Ok,SteveD;ila ni kwa USA kwanza.Ama kweli charity begins@home,sijui na mimi nianzishe ya kwangu!!Anyway,ikianza kufanya kazi Internationally naomba unijulishe if you don't mind.

Sawa, nitakuandikia barua, nijulishe tu anuani ya sanduku lako la posta
 
Back
Top Bottom