Los Angeles Times

Snapchat’s video push clicks

The social media app has reached 4 billion daily video views, on par with Facebook.

- By David Pierson and Paresh Dave

Snapchat’s aggressive push into curated video appears to be paying off.

The social media app, popular with young users, has reached 4 billion daily video views, Snapchat spokeswoma­n Jill Hazelbaker said.

That puts the app on par with Facebook, which reported 4 billion daily video views in April, and means that Snapchat has doubled its daily views in just three months.

The new numbers follow a series of deals with MTV, Major League Baseball and concert promoter Live Nation Entertainm­ent to include content that promotes the partners in the app’s curated “Live Stories” feature.

Exactly what counts as a view, however, has provoked controvers­y. Some platforms, such as Facebook, say a view is at least three seconds long. YouTube counts views at about 30 seconds.

The difference matters to advertiser­s, who want to know that their content is being watched as long as possible.

Snapchat would not say how many seconds must elapse before it counts a video view, but a test on a personal account showed it required just over one second to register a view on the app.

Snapchat is one of the few platforms that places strict limits on how long videos are — just 10 seconds. And it’s also one of the few places where videos are shown in full-screen mode by default, leaving less chance that users are distracted by something else.

Popular content creators on YouTube — who rely on digital advertisin­g and need standardiz­ed rates — decry Facebook’s three-second gauge for video views, saying it inf lates the true value of its daily tally of 4 billion views.

“That’s a problem for creators trying to standardiz­e rates for brand integratio­ns, for agencies and brands trying to understand this constantly shifting landscape, and for everyone who wants a little more stability in the online video in-

dustry,” Hank Green, a popular YouTuber, wrote in a widely read post on Medium in July.

Facebook countered by saying three seconds was sufficient to determine a viewer hadn’t moved on.

As the controvers­y sorts itself out, media partners and advertiser­s covet Snapchat’s 100 million users, 45% of whom are between the ages of 18 and 24, according to ComScore.

“Snapchat has certainly proven itself to be a major player in video distributi­on in a very short period of time,” said Peter Csathy, a streaming video expert and chief executive of Manatt Digital Media, a consulting and venture capital firm. “The question now is how do they monetize it.”

The answer is complicate­d. Snapchat has welcomed some advertisin­g already into its “Live Stories.” Its coverage of the MTV Video Music Awards Sunday included ads from CoverGirl, Taco Bell and Verizon.

Past advertiser­s include big brands such as CocaCola, McDonald’s and Universal.

But Snapchat Chief Executive Evan Spiegel has expressed a reluctance to fully embrace marketing. In a rare interview with Bloomberg in May, the 25-year-old founder said targeted ads generated through user’s profiles (like the ones on Facebook) were creepy.

“It’s definitely weird when a vacuum follows you around the Internet,” Spiegel said, adding that he would not allow ads in oneto-one video messaging on his platform.

Leaked documents obtained by Gawker last month show that Snapchat generated $3 million selling its first eight or so ads over six weeks last fall. That paled in comparison to the $129 million in expenses the company had during the first 11 months of 2014, the documents showed.

It’s unclear how much Snapchat charges marketers to appear in “Live Stories.” There are typically four slots for ads in the stories, each ad running 10 seconds. The first slot costs the most, with rates for the remaining slots cheaper in descending order, advertisin­g executives say.

“Live Stories” aren’t the only place Snapchat can charge advertiser­s. The app’s “Discover” feature carves out a place for about 15 publishers such as CNN, Vice and Tastemade to present stories and videos, and place ads. Snapchat charges 10 cents for each ad viewed.

But Csathy of Manatt Digital Media noted that it wasn’t imperative just yet for Snapchat to build revenue. The company has raised more than $1 billion in funding, placing its valuation at about $16 billion.

“Evan Spiegel isn’t doing things the old-fashioned way,” he said. “They’re building their reach and experiment­ing.”

 ?? Lionel Bonaventur­e AFP/Getty Images ?? SNAPCHAT typically has four slots for ads in its “Live Stories” feature, each ad running 10 seconds.
Lionel Bonaventur­e AFP/Getty Images SNAPCHAT typically has four slots for ads in its “Live Stories” feature, each ad running 10 seconds.

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