Written on July 13, 2008 – 6:17 pm
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief
Swedish video advertisement overlay service VideoPlaza has received €420,000 seed investment from Nordic VC Creandum and angels Henrik Torstensson and Magnus Hultman. VideoPlaza has been doing well - partnering up with Sweden’s number-three pay-TV station Kanal 5’s website and two other clients - and operates in a booming market.

CEO Sorosh Tavakoli
The Swedes watch 115% more online videos over the last year, so VideoPlaza has enough content to monetize. The money will be used for international expansion.
Earlier this week, the Wall Street Journal got two anonymous sources talking about YouTube’s failing advertisement strategy. The video giant generates 10 billion video views a day, but ‘only’ manages to make $200 million a year from advertising. Thus the Google-owned company might introduce pre and post-roll ads, said the sources to WSJ.
This YouTube story symbolizes the need for video sites to monetize their content. VideoPlaza - that offers overlay ads for Flash and Silverlight videos - will be one of many video ad start-ups that receive a financial boost. It’s time for them to fix those crappy business models.
By the way, VideoPlaza has an effective and friendly team page - good inspiration for yours.
I hope you like that post!

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Written on July 9, 2008 – 5:19 pm
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief
Wall Street Journal has an important web story today, as they’ve found two sources willing to talk a bit about YouTube’s advertisement plans. YouTube only makes $200 million a year with advertising. Yes, “only”, as you might expect a video service with over a billion video views each day to come up with a little more ad revenue. This gets the executives at Google a bit nervous, as they still have to justify the 1.65 billion acquisition. Therefor, they’re thinking of drastic measures - like pre-roll ads all over the place.
One of the - unfortunately anonymous - sources said that a review executed by Google North America advertising president Tim Armstrong had identified an impressive number of 105 problems within the ad-selling division. This review is part of Project Spaghetti, a nickname for the extensive evaluation of the YouTube advertisement plan that will end before or during Q3. Although Armstrong seems worried about offending the audience of YouTube, he WILL adopt pre- and post-rolls. At least, that’s what the secret sources say.
This probably will alienate some of the YouTube users, but most people will just take it for granted. There are ads on TV too.. And this group gets more important, as they’ll become more profitable for Google. So the increasing revenues will make up for the few thousand people that find a different video home.
[Via paidcontent.org]