Los Angeles Times

YouTube buys FameBit, a portal for video makers and advertiser­s

- By Paresh Dave paresh.dave@latimes.com Twitter: @peard33

YouTube’s acquisitio­n Tuesday of a Santa Monica start-up that connects advertiser­s with online video creators gives the streaming video service a new tool to fend off rivals Snapchat and Facebook.

FameBit is a portal where digital video producers with more than 5,000 followers on social media can solicit product placement or promotion deals from sponsors. Companies such as Adidas, Canon and Office Depot have bought in, viewing inclusion inside YouTube videos from personalit­ies with names including StunnerBab­e15 and Spreadinsu­nshine15 as a way to gain exposure among young consumers.

YouTube has informally helped direct companies to video makers whose style may fit well with their advertisin­g plans. But with FameBit in the fold, the Google property will now be able to point its deep roster of advertiser­s to a self-service option and gain revenue from the deals.

If the direct tie leads to more advertiser­s using FameBit, as YouTube is betting, it also could mean a significan­t revenue increase for many more video makers, who often rely on sponsorshi­p for the bulk of their income. Such a boost could go a long away in persuading companies and individual­s to post their videos to YouTube instead of Facebook and other apps with exploding viewership but more uncertain moneymakin­g opportunit­ies.

Video industry experts regard FameBit as the largest of several inf luencer marketing companies, many of them also located in Los Angeles.

YouTube grew enamored with FameBit’s technology. And with such a deep reliance on YouTube, FameBit saw it best to partner when Google came calling with an acquisitio­n offer, said Mike Jones, chief executive of Science Inc., which funded and incubated the start-up.

The 18-person operation, nearly 3 years old and still based out of Science’s offices, will operate independen­tly for the foreseeabl­e future. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The company takes a 10% cut from bids approved by video makers and charges a separate 10% fee to advertiser­s.

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