I was playing with my video podcasts statistics tonight and I noticed there were 300 000 video views in about three months since I started posting on vpod.tv. It is about 3000 views a day, nothing compared to a mass media of course, but encouraging. It re
Vidmeter gathers data from across the web to provide an accurate representation of the most popular online videos. While it is impossible to tell the exact number of views a given video has received from every website and every download, Vidmeter gathers
ut if you look at those same statistics again (left), Metacafe's rapid increase in "stickiness" in August looks like an anomaly. A very big anomaly. And if you remove the high data point from August, you can draw a plausible trend line from July to Septem
I’ve been compiling data about CBS videos on YouTube for the past week. Here are some charts with the Top 15 videos from the CBS channel on YouTube. I began gathering data on November 21st and have charted the week from Nov. 22nd to Nov.28th (inclusive)
They uploaded 300 clips, which got 29.2 million views in a month, averaging 857,000 per day. They also note an increase in audience for shows that are doing well on YouTube: David Letterman up 200,000, Craig Ferguson up 100,000.
The core of the matter is not hits or page views or uniques or subscribers or Alexa #'s it's how many completed videos were served. The video carries the ad.
Producers cannot make intelligent creative or business decisions about their work without meaningful measurements. In the absence of sane metrics, we're already repeating the mistakes that turned television into what it is today.
Das Blog Rabbit Bites sammelt skurrile YouTube zahlen. Manche User haben angeblich 1 Mio Videos in 6 Monaten gesehen = 465 Videos/Std. Oder 24 000 Videos in einer Woche. Da sind wohl User am Werk, die schön manipulieren.