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
Vidmetrix provides you with the analytics you need to know about your distributed online video campaigns. Our patent-pending technology shows you where, when, and how much exposure your videos are getting across 44 different video networks and gives you d
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)
There are lot of ways to catch cheaters: * Do the views come from the same subscriber? * Did views skyrocket in a certain period with a steady instead of random growth rate? * Did a user view more videos in a period than possible? * Is the ratio of views/
The number of video-embeds on MySpace grew on average 57% between the months of September and October, yet MySpace Videos grew a whopping 93.27%. Nearly twice as many MySpace videos were found on users’ pages. With everyone talking about YouTube these d
* the number of views * the overall rank * the number of views from yesterday * yesterday's rank * how many from the yesterday's views were from emailed videos and from embedded videos * the rank in the top of emailed videos and embedded videos (for yeste
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.
Surprisingly low viewership for videos of ‘06/’08 candidates on YouTube. They are obviously not being sought out and blogs are apparently not doing much linking to political clips.
Momentan werden die Views von Videos und die Listens von Podcasts extrem ungenau gemessen. Nirgends gibt es einen Hinweis darauf, was wirklich ein View ist und was gezählt wird. Download, übertragene Daten usw.?