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YouTube wants the British government to support creators

YouTube believes that its creator community in the U.K. deserves some high-level support, so it’s preparing to take its talking points to Westminster. After surveying U.K.-based creators about their priorities and needs, YouTube has shared a list of issues that could be addressed through government funding — and the platform is inviting more British users to share their thoughts as well.

At its annual YouTube Festival, the titular platform teamed up with Public First to conduct its survey of U.K. creators. The ensuing responses painted a picture of the progress YouTube’s U.K. community has made and the challenges it still faces.

Alison Lomax, YouTube’s Managing Director for the U.K. and Ireland, summed up creators’ most common pain points in a blog post. Survey respondents are interested in training programs to serve the growing class of creator economy professionals, studio space (particularly outside of London), simplified rules for film permits, relationships with financial firms, and access to the “traditional” media landscape.

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Over the years, YouTube has made efforts to address some of these concerns on its own. It opened a YouTube Space in London in 2016 and spent resources to promote rising U.K. creators. But the YouTube Space never reopened post-COVID, and YouTube has reallocated resources to confront ills like misinformation

and violence.

Once YouTube finishes collecting survey data from its U.K. community, the plan is to assemble a “full findings report that will be shared next year,” according to Lomax’s blog post. The report will “inform a series of recommendations that we will share with the Government, industry and advertisers” toward the ultimate goal of “real, long-lasting change.”

Government support for the creator economy is not unheard of, though it is a relative rarity in the U.K. and U.S. The Australian government has devoted significant resources to domestic creators through nine rounds of the Skip Ahead program. Another Commonwealth nation, Canada, has used pilot programs to uplift digital creators.

Is YouTube’s appeal to U.K. authorities a sign of a broader strategy the platform will use in other countries? Given the role creators played in the reelection of Donald Trump, YouTube could have a golden opportunity to lobby the U.S. government for more thorough support. Invitations to the White House are nice, but access to coveted resources is even better.

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Published by
Sam Gutelle

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