Consumer Electronics Videos Have Drawn 18.9 Billion YouTube Views

YouTube marketing software company Pixability has taken a look at YouTube videos related to consumer electronics (CE), and the results emphasize the video sharing site’s unique role in the purchasing process. The biggest number in Pixability’s new report is 18.9 billion–the total number of views on CE videos on YouTube.

To put together the report, Pixability looked at data from more than 900,000 videos, including those from the 25 largest electronics brands on YouTube. The top five brands in that group–Google, Samsung, Apple, Nokia, and Sony–generated 77% of the group’s total views, easily outpacing the other 20 brands. All of those channels, however, were dwarfed by fan-generated YouTube content. Videos from non-official brand channels made up 76% of all CE video views in 2013.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Given its status as a company centered on YouTube, Pixability naturally used the results of its study to lay out some best practices for CE brands hoping to create content on YouTube. Some of these tips, such as the need for a consistent posting schedule and the relative inefficiency of commercials on YouTube, are fairly general, but there are plenty of trends specific to this industry. For instance, the report notes that CE video views spike around the releases of new products; on the contrary, most video categories spike around major holidays and tentpole

events. Therefore, it is important for CE brands to increase video output around major release dates.

Another interesting twist is the give-and-take between official CE brands and fan videos. As the report explains, viewers prefer official brand videos during the pre-release period, when they are looking for announcement videos and previews. After release, viewers turn to the fans, who provide reviews and ratings of new products.

These trends inform the way the typical viewer uses YouTube when considering new purchases, and CE brands would be wise to take YouTube’s function as a research tool to heart. “People often go to YouTube first while researching which consumer electronics to buy,” said Marques Brownlee, who makes CE products reviews on YouTube. “Text reviews can be helpful and photos even better, but video reviews are easily more informative. If a picture is worth 1,000 reviews, a 5-minute review speaks volumes to a potential buyer.”

For more information on Pixability’s CE study, check out the company’s website.

Share
Published by
Sam Gutelle

Recent Posts

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: A clean sweep from FIFA

'Tis the season for festive holiday beverages, and some of YouTube's biggest channels are raising…

10 minutes ago

TikTok’s new ad product helps brands distribute and scale their microdramas

Microdramas aren't just a growing entertainment trend -- the short-form, serialized format is a hit…

5 hours ago

Can YouTube gamify its videos? Two ‘Mario Kart’ fans pulled it off.

A playable version of Rainrow Road has come to YouTube. The notable Mario Kart level is featured…

6 hours ago

Google’s “platform properties” turn search data into an asset for creators

Google is sitting on a treasure trove of statistical data, and it's putting those data points…

8 hours ago

The Lana’s Life x Claire’s partnership is a Roblox giveaway blended with real-world retail

After enduring multiple rounds of bankruptcy filings, Claire's could use a win, and it's hoping that…

1 day ago

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: It’s like if your dad watched The Amazing Digital Circus

'Tis the season for festive holiday beverages, and some of YouTube's biggest channels are raising…

2 days ago