With 14.4 Billion Views, YouTube Beauty Gurus Change Brand Priorities

It’s well known that YouTube beauty gurus trump brands in terms of online influence, but a new study from Pixability explains the massive degree to which vloggers, “haul girls”, and other style creators dominate the online beauty conversation.

For its study, Pixability examined the top 168 beauty brands on YouTube as well as thousands of creators who create beauty content. The most important context stats are arranged in a handy infographic:

What’s most interesting, however, isn’t the difference in traffic between brands and creators; that’s to be expected on a platform like YouTube. Instead, the most important wrinkle is the way beauty gurus are changing the sort of content that consumers want to see. The online video audience isn’t interested in promos, product announcements, or behind-the-scenes features; they want to see the goods in action. Tutorials, how-tos, and hauls are now the preferred beauty subgenres.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

As Pixability’s report explains, brands that are embracing the beauty community are reaching a tremendous number of viewers. In particular, the report discusses NYX, which has received 380 million YouTube views despite a “limited budget.” 99.5% of NYX’s views come from user-generated content; in contrast, only 42%

of Dove‘s views come from UGC. The result: Dove has 143 million fewer YouTube views than NYX despite having a much longer history on the site.

Again, this trend isn’t new and fashion-and-beauty-centric online video networks like StyleHaul have seen some significant growth in the past several months (with four of its partners among the Top 100 fastest growing channels on YouTube in December 2013). But NYX provides a great example of a brand putting its understanding of the YouTube beauty community to good use. Even on their own channels, brands are encouraged to think like individual YouTube creators. “Beauty brands that produce a wider variety of content topics in varying lengths and on a consistent publishing schedule can capture viewers within all stages of the customer journey and increase customer engagement with specific content,” explains the report.

Considering the size of the YouTube style community, video should obviously be a huge part of any beauty brand’s marketing strategy. In order to maximize this effort, brands need to remember, when on YouTube, to think as the YouTubers do.

Share
Published by
Sam Gutelle

Recent Posts

After cutting 15% of staff and saying goodbye to its CEO, Peloton must figure out what’s next

Peloton is dismissing a chunk of its workforce, including its top executive. Barry McCarthy announced that he is…

14 hours ago

Meta is using AI to power brand and creator matchmaking on Facebook and Instagram

Meta is looking to improve creator and brand experiences on its platform by investing in AI. The…

14 hours ago

Bob Does Sports cracks a cold one with new “Have a Day” tequila line

Bob Does Sports, the self-dubbed home of "brilliantly dumb sporting adventures" hosted by Robby Berger,…

14 hours ago

Billion Dollar Boy launches biz dev community for creators with flagship location in London

Influencer marketing agency Billion Dollar Boy is launching a new membership community that's "dedicated to…

16 hours ago

Millionaires: Giulia Amato on faith, finding her niche, and getting up at 4 a.m.

Welcome to Millionaires, where we profile creators who have recently crossed the one million follower…

19 hours ago

Creators on the Rise: Celestial Sylvia reads the danger all around us

Welcome to Creators on the Rise, where we find and profile breakout creators who are…

2 days ago