Call & Times

YouTube keeping its wallet closed; rivals loading up on programmin­g

TECHNOLOGY

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

YouTube is hitting the pause button in Hollywood.

As Netflix and Amazon.com pour everlarger sums into TV and movie production, Google is holding spending at current levels for its YouTube Red streaming service for the next two years, people with knowledge of the matter said. That's leading producers to question the company's strategy.

Google often makes multiple investment­s in the same industry and waits to see what works. YouTube, in particular, has revamped its video strategy repeatedly as parent Alphabet Inc. tries to develop paid-subscriber businesses. Now it's pushing into entertainm­ent on three fronts: with YouTube Red, with a live video service called YouTube TV and with a new music streaming product.

"YouTube Originals are a driving force for YouTube Red, and we have a full slate of Originals already planned for 2018 and 2019," Robert Kyncl, YouTube's chief business officer, said in a statement. "While we don't comment on speculatio­n regarding our budgets, you'll see us continue to invest heavily in original programmin­g as we ramp up our overall efforts to promote YouTube Red over the next year."

YouTube plans to spend a few hundred million dollars on TV shows and movies this year, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing the company's plans. While that sounds like a lot, a flat budget means the company risks falling further behind Netflix and Amazon.

YouTube is one of the three "big bets" that Google Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai has cited as the company looks for future growth. The video site generated an estimated $15 billion in sales last year but has yet to establish more than a foothold in paid services.

On a Feb. 1 earnings call, Pichai highlighte­d new deals for a low-cost alternativ­e to cable TV — dubbed YouTube TV — but made no mention of YouTube Red, the ondemand streaming service first introduced in October 2015. YouTube TV, which offers a bundle of live TV channels for $40 a month, has signed up an estimated couple hundred thousand subscriber­s since being introduced last year.

YouTube is also about to roll out a new music service, which has been receiving a lot of resources. YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki recently referred to Red as a music service, which only added to the confusion.

"That's the first time I've ever heard you characteri­ze YouTube Red a music service," Chris Williams, the head of children's media company Pocket. watch, said at the Code Media conference this month.

Run by engineers, Google has struggled to carve out a large role in entertainm­ent beyond hosting other people's programmin­g.

YouTube was one of the first major tech companies to fund original shows, seeding 100 channels from online creators and celebritie­s like Amy Poehler and Jay Z. The results were mixed but led to the birth of several popular outlets, including SourceFed and Awesomenes­sTV. YouTube funded a second round of channels before ending the program in 2013.

The company then shifted from funding original video to building a paid music service, called Music Key. YouTube hoped to sign up customers with features like commercial­free and background listening.

At the same time, the clout of YouTube and its cadre of online creators continued to grow. Advertisin­g sales on the video platform soared and online YouTube influencer­s like Michelle Phan began to turn up in ad campaigns, Hollywood movies and live events. Several ended up making shows for Netflix, Amazon and Hulu.

YouTube changed the name of its music service to Red in 2015, and once again began funding original video series to attract subscriber­s. The company started by pairing online creators with establishe­d Hollywood producers.

Susanne Daniels, a veteran TV executive, joined YouTube from MTV in July 2015 to oversee original programmin­g and began looking to back more traditiona­l entertainm­ent.

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