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Archive for February, 2008

Determining Your Bandwidth Needs

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

When selecting a web hosting plan, one of the most important things that you will research is the amount of bandwidth that you should by as part of your hosting package. Bandwidth is simply the amount of data that flows between your website and your web host in a preset time limit, usually a month. Web site hosts buy bandwidth from wholesale bandwidth centers and then resell the bandwidth as part of web hosting packages.

Is Hosting Your Website Locally Better For Your Business?

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

There are various benefits to hosting your web site in the same country as your business. Although the world is connected through various cables and satellites the high expense of these long distance connections make these connections slower than ones connecting towns and cities within your home country.

Good Affordable Web Hosting

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

Selecting The best web hosting provider. The Internet today offers more and more opportunities to create and operate a online business, this can be anything from a one page product launch to a multi-page dynamic web business. The internet allows an online presence to your physical business.

5 Reasons Not To Be Your Own Webhost

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

With the growing proliferation of high speed internet, cheap hardware, and readily accessible hosting software, more and more people are choosing to host their own web sites. Hosting your own website can definitely be a good way to save money, and gain some experience configuring a server, all while keeping total control over the environment that your site is running in. In spite of the upsides to hosting your own site, in many situations it will not be a web host’s best option. Here are 5 reasons not to be your own web host.

Cheap Web hoisting

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

What ever be the nature of the business we all like to get it for an affordable payment. Cheap web hosting services mainly target the people who have this line of thought and still want to get rid of …

Budget Hosting

Written by on Friday, February 29th, 2008 in Industry News.

Budget hosting plans are the best suited for those persons who want to lunch a website at an affordable price. All those who have only a limited use of the web site can go for this type of web hostin…

When does watching a video online count as a “video view”? If your video counter on YouTube or Blip.tv says 5,000 views, what does that really mean? Have 5,000 people really watched your video from beginning to end or are these just those that clicked play, no matter how long they remained to watch after that?

internet-video-metrics-o.jpg
Photo credit: TubeMogul

Internet video metrics are ways to measure and report when a video view is considered such. And since there are no pre-established rules in this arena, most every video sharing site takes a different approach to calculate video views.

In fact the most interesting thing one can do is to look at all the different ways that such metrics are measured today to understand better the online video marketing and distribution panorama.

And this is what Mark Roblat of TubeMogul, a company devoted to provide detailed analysis and reporting of online video views across all major video sharing sites, has in fact done.

Nonetheless this market is in continuous flux and changes happen continuously, this research work conducted in mid-2007 provides great insight to those entering the online video distribution arena and wanting to understand more and better what the “numbers” really mean.

Here, thanks to TubeMogul permission, his original report and data:

What Counts as a View?

by Mark Rotblat

“View” testing for various online video sites

1) Research Abstract

This report discusses the findings of an experiment designed to test which actions result in a “view” as measured on eight online video websites.

The impetus for this research was to identify the differences in view counting among popular video sites - particularly as the online video industry has not yet adopted a standard definition for a view.

The implications are relevant for video advertisers, content publishers, and those that might seek to artificially inflate the popularity of a given video.

TubeMogul is an online video analytics company serving publishers large and small who need independent information about video performance on the Web’s top video sharing sites.

TubeMogul’s analytic technology aggregates video-viewing data from multiple sources to give publishers improved understanding of when, where and how often videos are watched, track and compare what’s hot and what’s not, measure the impact of marketing campaigns, gather competitive intelligence, and share the data with colleagues or friends.

The methodology employed in this study is a starting point and by no means an exhaustive list of testable scenarios.

2) Methodology

Five scenarios were tested for this experiment:

  1. Watching a video start-to-finish multiple times
  2. Watching a video and stopping at various points before the video ended:
    1. Less than half-way
    2. More than half-way (but not to completion)
  3. Refreshing the browser after video play has begun
  4. Watching a video start-to-finish multiple times through a player embedded on another site

All tests were run from a single computer between 6/5/07 and 6/12/07, and each website tested had approximately 100 plays.

3) Summary of Findings

Site
Full View <1/2 View >1/2 View Refresh Embed
Aol Uncut
Dailymotion
Google
Metacafe* One/IP addr. One/IP addr. One/IP addr. One/IP addr. One/IP addr.
Myspace
Revver
Yahoo! Video One/IP addr. One/IP addr.
YouTube
One/IP addr.

●=Count
○=No Count

* Metacafe does not provide a “Private” setting for videos, so there was no control over views counted for the test.

Site Specifics

google video.gif

Google Video - Video was marked “Unlisted” to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website (testing was performed in both “Unlisted” and “Live” modes). A video play resulted in views counted only when it was for more than half the length of the video. Google Video does not count views that result from an embedded video.

metacafe.gif

Metacafe - Metacafe does not provide a “Private” setting for videos, so there was no control over views counted for the test.

Attempts were made with different videos, but all garnered over 50 outside views in the first day.

Metacafe informed us that they count a view if 50% of the video was viewed or at least 30 seconds. However, from our testing, it appears that even multiple full-length views are not counted in full.

Communications with admins at the site revealed that views are tracked by IP address, so perhaps even full views in multiple are not actually counted from a single computer.

MetaCafe counts a single view that originates from embedded videos. It appears that if multiple views come from the same IP address, just the first is recorded.

myspace.gif

Myspace - Video was marked “Private” to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website.

All tested categories resulted in views counted except when the video was stopped less than halfway through. Refreshes may have counted because it took approximately half of the video for the page to reload.

Myspace counts all views that originate from embedded videos.

revver.gif

Revver - Video was marked “Online” during testing and “Offline” in between testing sessions to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website.

All tested categories resulted in views counted.

However, it is important to note that Revver switched their methodology for counting a view in March, whereas previously they had been one of the more stringent in counting views.

At that time, the site switched from a view being a completed play to being an initiated play.

Revver still captures “completions” in the API data, though completions aren’t published publicly.

They are the only site in the study that has completions in their API, and this information reflects that the advertisement was viewed.

Revver counts views that result from embedded videos.

yahoo video.gif

Yahoo! Video - Yahoo! does not provide a “Private” setting for videos, so there was no control over views counted for the test.

However, there was little to no outside influence on the view count.

From testing, it was determined that even multiple full-length views are not counted in-full.

The refresh test showed the counter going up, but then the system corrected itself and the counter went back down.

Yahoo! Video does not count views that result from embedded videos.

youtube.gif

YouTube - Video was marked “Private” to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website.

Only multiple full-length views count in-full from a single IP address. Multiple embed plays counted as one view.

YouTube counts a single view that originates from embedded videos. If multiple views come from the same IP address, just the first is recorded.

aol uncut.gif

AOL Uncut - Video was marked “Private” to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website.

All tested categories resulted in views counted. Views that originate from embedded views are counted.

dailymotion.gif

Dailymotion - Video was marked “Private” to prevent others from viewing it through a search on the website.

No views were logged from refreshing the browser after play had started or from embedding the video on another site.

DailyMotion does not record views that result from embedded videos.

Most Stringent Sites for Counting Views

Site
Count Methodology
Yahoo! Video ____________________
Metacafe* ____________________
YouTube ________________
Google ________
Dailymotion ____________
Myspace ____
AOL Uncut ____
Revver ____

Legend:
Longer bars indicated more stringent rules

Conclusions

The top online video websites differ greatly in how they record video views.

This lack of standardization presents complexity to content producers and advertisers in understanding the relative popularity of videos across video sites.

To fully realize the potential of advertising models in the online video medium, increased standardization and transparency is required.

Originally written by Mark Rotblat for TubeMogul and first published as What Counts as a View? on 27th of June 2007



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