Now before I continue, I want to make something perfectly clear: No, I do not actually plan on doing this. Even if I did, I suck at keeping this kind of secret, which is kind of important if you're going for this kind of scam.
Anyway, I saw an ad (probably one that was targeted at me because it could tell from some cookies that I do a lot of research on growing youtube channels) that advertised paid views that promised high retention. They defined high retention as either 70% of the video's length or 50 minutes of watch time, whichever occurs first.
While this is certainly superior to other "paid views" services that only advertise views but not view duration, it still obviously is a kiss of death for aspiring youtubers. They still aren't actually engaging in your content. Youtube will notice that these viewers are just viewing but not actually staying for other content, and so youtube will assume that these people must have lost interest. It may take a little longer for youtube to pick up than if the viewer was leaving within the first few seconds, but that just means you're delaying the inevitable.
But here's the part that really made me think: The amount they charge for views appears to be less than the amount you can realistically charge sponsors, given the same number of views.
I saw a video on youtube that said that a good range to ask for sponsors is between 3-5% of your video's views within the first 30 days of it going live. So if you get 1,000 views within the first 30 days, you can ask for about $30-$50 reasonably for someone to pay you to sponsor their product in your video.
In advertising jargon, this basically means $30-$50 CPM (or "cost per 1,000 impressions").
However, the paid views service I saw only charged $5 to earn 1,000 views. They only charge $9 for 2,000 views, allowing you to save money by purchasing more views.
Are you starting to see where I'm going with this?
Assuming this service is legitimate and youtube won't simply ban your account because of it, or remove the views, then couldn't you just upload daily videos, pay $9 to get 2,000 views from them (complete with 70% view duration), and then charge sponsors, at a minimum $60 to plug their products in your videos, turning a $51 profit every day? You could eventually start buying delux packages, start getting 5-digit or 6-digit view counts on each video, and charge even more from sponsors!
Eventually, youtube may catch wind that these viewers aren't really sticking with your channel and watching other videos, and algorthmically demote your channel accordingly, but if you're turning a profit just on sponsors alone, who the hell cares?!
Again, I have no intention of actually doing this. But I just think some exceptionally sleezy people might think it's a good idea.
What do you guys think?
Anyway, I saw an ad (probably one that was targeted at me because it could tell from some cookies that I do a lot of research on growing youtube channels) that advertised paid views that promised high retention. They defined high retention as either 70% of the video's length or 50 minutes of watch time, whichever occurs first.
While this is certainly superior to other "paid views" services that only advertise views but not view duration, it still obviously is a kiss of death for aspiring youtubers. They still aren't actually engaging in your content. Youtube will notice that these viewers are just viewing but not actually staying for other content, and so youtube will assume that these people must have lost interest. It may take a little longer for youtube to pick up than if the viewer was leaving within the first few seconds, but that just means you're delaying the inevitable.
But here's the part that really made me think: The amount they charge for views appears to be less than the amount you can realistically charge sponsors, given the same number of views.
I saw a video on youtube that said that a good range to ask for sponsors is between 3-5% of your video's views within the first 30 days of it going live. So if you get 1,000 views within the first 30 days, you can ask for about $30-$50 reasonably for someone to pay you to sponsor their product in your video.
In advertising jargon, this basically means $30-$50 CPM (or "cost per 1,000 impressions").
However, the paid views service I saw only charged $5 to earn 1,000 views. They only charge $9 for 2,000 views, allowing you to save money by purchasing more views.
Are you starting to see where I'm going with this?
Assuming this service is legitimate and youtube won't simply ban your account because of it, or remove the views, then couldn't you just upload daily videos, pay $9 to get 2,000 views from them (complete with 70% view duration), and then charge sponsors, at a minimum $60 to plug their products in your videos, turning a $51 profit every day? You could eventually start buying delux packages, start getting 5-digit or 6-digit view counts on each video, and charge even more from sponsors!
Eventually, youtube may catch wind that these viewers aren't really sticking with your channel and watching other videos, and algorthmically demote your channel accordingly, but if you're turning a profit just on sponsors alone, who the hell cares?!
Again, I have no intention of actually doing this. But I just think some exceptionally sleezy people might think it's a good idea.
What do you guys think?