Is there a ratio of advertising income you can expect on YouTube based on views/subscribers? For example, for every 1000 subscribers how much ad revenue can you expect? Is there a ratio that works? What other ways can you earn revenue off your audience?
Not really. It depends on several factors: how engaged is your audience (how many of your videos do those subscribers watch?), where your videos are watched (US CPMs [the amount you make for every 1,000 views] can be several times of those outside the US), how many of your views are on mobile (a lower percentage of mobile videos are monetized), and how much of your inventory can YouTube sell (YouTube does not usually sell ads on 100% of your views).
Aside from advertising (which you split with YouTube), you can also make money through product sponsorships, product placement, show sponsorships (mention a product or wear a particular brand during your shows) - you usually don't have to split these earnings with YouTube.
I run a Multi Channel Network on YouTube since 2009. I'm YouTube Certified in Audience Growth and Digital Rights.
Feel free to contact me for more info.
Answered 11 years ago
The amount of money that you make on YouTube definitely varies, but typically most people say they're getting somewhere around $2 per thousand views on average. It depends on a number of factors such as where those views are coming from (ie. which countries), who they're coming from (ie. age and sex), what your content is about, and what else you've got going on with your channel in terms of the videos, views, subscribers, etc.
Many YouTubers earn revenue from selling merchandise, music on iTunes when relevant, affiliate promotions, and brand deals (ie. sponsorship and product placement). The majority of the bigger content creators on YouTube don't make most of their income from Adsense because they can often get a sponsor to pay MUCH higher CPM's ($ per 1000 views) or even a good flat rate amount for promotion/endorsement in a video.
Answered 11 years ago
The ad income will vary drastically based on who is viewing your content and if you can have your inventory direct sold or if you're using google to fill it and if you have an MCN taking a cut, etc. But let's break it down:
ADS
Let’s assume you're part of an MCN, and you're getting a $5 CPM (probably likely). YouTube takes 45% off the top, and then you have to give a percentage to your MCN (let's say 25%). Here's how that would break out:
$5.00 CPM
$5.00 CPM x 55% to channel (after 45% goes to YouTube) = $2.75
45% of views are monetized ~ $1.24 (odds are most of your views won't have ads)
25% goes to MCN ~ $1.15
Total to creator ~ $1.15 per thousand views
OTHER REVENUE OPPORTUNITIES
I literally just did a blog post about this, you can read that here (http://brendangahan.com/?p=343). But, long story short, YouTube can be a great platform to cultivate an audience, and from there you can channel the audience to any number of revenue opportunities (Merch, etc). Hope that helps.
Answered 11 years ago
I've monetized my own YouTube channel by offering online courses.
With a very small channel I've seen some quick revenues.
My stats:
- 12 videos
- 150,000 views approx.
- 2100 subscribers
Revenue:
- on YouTube = $0
- from online courses sold through YouTube - $10k+ per month
If you're interested I put together a series of blog posts about how to do this here:
http://blog.thinkific.com/?s=youtube
Answered 9 years ago
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