Business World

Amazon turns thousands of Twitch streamers into product pitchmen

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AMAZON.COM, Inc. will pay commission­s to gamers, artists, chefs and others on its Twitch Interactiv­e video-streaming service for selling products to their fans through its retail site.

Think of it as video-game broadcaste­rs hosting virtual Tupperware parties. Except they’re more likely to hawk headsets and consoles than salad spinners. At least for now.

Twitch announced the initiative last week ahead of the PAX West video game convention in Seattle as part of a broader introducti­on of new features meant to increase money-making opportunit­ies and audience engagement on the site. Twitch attracts 10 million daily viewers who watch live broadcasts of people playing video games, cooking, or even just sitting around eating. The Web site sees streamers as key to helping it win viewers from its much larger rival, Google’s YouTube. Converting streamers into sales people will help Amazon boost revenue while giving them a way to earn money and dedicate more time to cultivatin­g viewers.

Twitch began expanding beyond video games in 2015 to include artists and chefs, so the product promotion possibilit­ies from Twitch streamers are vast.

“These influencer­s are a massive market,” said Tobias Sherman, former global head of eSports at the entertainm­ent agency WME-IMG. “They are the same as sports figures in being able to convert eyeballs and fans into dollars and cents. Everyone plays games and it tethers everyone together.”

The Gear on Amazon feature will let Twitch streamers showcase their favorite products as a widget on their page. Viewers who click the widget are routed to Amazon, where they can buy the streamer’s favorite items. The streamer gets a commission of as much as 10% on each sale, Amazon said.

Amazon purchased Twitch for about $1 billion in 2014 as part of a push into online content that includes movies and music. It has been slowly introducin­g commerce features on the site, including selling video games, to convert Twitch into a commercial hub for the $100-billion gaming industry. The challenge is slowly integratin­g the sales features so Twitch doesn’t lose its reputation as a gathering spot.

The commission­s will be available to 22,000 Twitch performers called partners, who generally appear a few times a week, attract hundreds of viewers for each broadcast, and get a share of subscripti­on and ad revenue. Tens of thousands of “affiliates,” a new designatio­n Twitch announced in April to help promising streamers reach partner status, also will be eligible.

Twitch is free to watch. It sells advertisin­g and subscripti­ons. Subscriber­s pay $5 a month per channel to interact with their favorite streamers in chat rooms and access emoticons that are popular tools for communicat­ing on the fast-moving site. —

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