Web 3: The Ownership Model Is The Future For Content Creators

A lot of attention is being paid to content creation and the potential of this as a viable path for many. There is no doubt that some were able to turn their YouTube channels into a fortune. However, that is only a small percentage of the creators.

For every Mr. Beast, there are tens of thousands who get next to nothing. In fact, according to this article, only 3% of the channels generate anything above the poverty line.

When we dig into the numbers, it is easy to see how this is the case. With YouTube, volume is needed.

.Since YouTube takes a 45% revenue split, that net CPM range equates to a gross CPM of about $1-$9. In other words, each view generates between $0.001-$0.009 in gross ad revenue. Again, creators are only getting about half of that.

That means 1 million views will generate roughly $2,000. What we are dealing with is a diminishing return if we consider the fact that content is going to get easier to create with the quality continually increasing, especially as artificial intelligence factors into the equation.


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Changing Models

Advertising was long established as the payment mechanism. It started with broadcast television and moving into the online world. This is changing as many newspapers went to subscription models. It is no common for that to exceed the advertising revenue. The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and other publications such as this are in this situation.

It is something that Elon Musk is also looking to do with Twitter (X). He spouted off about the advertisers, telling them to "go eff themselves". Was this a radical move? Yes. However, against the backdrop of what is taking place, it is not that crazy. In fact, it might be a prelude to the future of some of these digital platforms where advertising is going to be a much smaller part of the revenue stream.

Consider the idea of a company like Amazon Prime Video getting professional sports contracts. Broadcasters do this to turn a profit on the advertising. This is the age old model. Amazon has a different approach. It is using this to entire more Prime subscriptions. Hence, turning a profit directly on the broadcast rights is secondary. It can make it up on the subscriptions and what is purchased using it.

This appears to be the new model for platforms.

In short, it is provide a subscription service and keep adding value to it. When charging $10-$20 per month, make sure it includes enough for different people so that it is a "no-brainer". The value far outpaces the cost.

Amazon, to its credit, has perfected this. Most come out ahead of the $100 (or so) yearly fee simply through free shipping. Anyone who purchases a lot from the company would likely spend more than that in a year. Through in music, video, sports, and whatever else they are packing in and we can see how any regular Amazon users is foolish not to go Prime.

Musk is now bringing AI into this. Not only is there the checkmark which provides access to some features, we also see Grok as another inclusion into one of the subscription plans. He keeps building more that can be monetized.

Of course, all of this is focused upon the platforms (or companies behind them). None of this really benefits the content creators.

New Model: Ownership

Here is where Web 3 enters the picture.

My view of the future is where these newer models hold some validity. The difference is in the ownership model that is employed.

With the platforms mentioned, the shareholders are the ones who benefit. Unless a content creator buys the stock, if publicly traded, little is gained financially. Some might get a piece of the ad revenue or subscription, but as we see, it is minimal compared to the overall.

Web3 sets this on its ear.

What if the content creator and owners were impossible to separate? Here is where we can add an additional model. Under this scenario, either (or both) side of the equation is of financial benefit.

For example, does a content creator get paid on the content? This is one avenue. On the traditional platforms, the split is important. With Web3, it suddenly becomes secondary.

The reason for this is the monetization of the platform. If the user has stake, he or she financially benefits from whatever models are employed. Just like the shareholders of Amazon, it is to the benefit of the token holders for the platform to increase its monetization. Shareholders like to see larger ad and subscription revenue because it adds to the overall profitability of the company.

With Web3, we see the same thing. Depending upon how it is structured, this will add to the token value along with potentially paying out more to those staking. Couple this with the ability to get paid via the content creation models and we can see how users can benefit in a number of different ways.

Focusing upon Web 2.0, we see the ownership model missing from the content creator discussion. As always, they are on opposite sides of the fence.

Web3 aligns this. When content creators have stake in the platform, they benefit from all financial increase. This can be captured through various pathways that pay the creators. However, they also benefit directly from the appreciation in token value.

It is something Web 2.0 cannot offer since the existing business models stand in the way. Having shareholders simply precludes this.

Here is the opportunity for Web3 platforms. They can start with a clean sheet design, implementing systems that pay both token holders and content creators, many who are the same.


What is Hive

Posted Using InLeo Alpha



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12 comments
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Well with web3 and more development functions with it can bring opportunities for multiple streams revenue collections, ownership model to take over and monetize in so many wonderful fields that would create value.

Already social media giants like twitter and tech companies are taking chances out of it and using the resources like ads and other services, web3 in this context can provide the individuals with chances to be brand themselves.

But we have more to check in the future.

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I remember reading a post about how Youtube creators aren't earning as much a while back, and that some Hive/Peakd authors are earning more than their average. This reminded me of that post. Even just from that comparison, a lot of YT creators should think of switching to Web3. Add to that the different things Inleo has planned and what you mentioned above, there seems to be much more upside in Web3.

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I agree with what you wrote. I would also add that the majority of Italian crypto divulgers still use YouTube. I wonder why?! If we're talking about crypto, it would be right to use a decentralized application

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I think the biggest hindrance is the negative connotation that Web3 and Crypto still has on the public. If you ask people, a lot of them would still attribute Crypto to the picture NFTs like BAYC; most of them think it is a scam. The other one is publicity. I only learned of Hive/Peakd because I played Splinterlands. Even after using it for 1 year, I have not seen or heard of Hive outside of its own ecosystem.

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I agree with what you wrote. You described a situation that is more or less verifiable here in Italy too. I believe we will have to wait a few years for real change

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I have my fingers crossed that it is sooner than you think. With the Blackrock ETFs, and BTC Halving next year, we might see a Bull run. I hope we can capitalize more on it this time, and get mass adoption.

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Obviously I hope you are right, but let's take the energy issue for example. 70% of homes in Italy consume a lot of energy. Only 5% of homes in Italy have good energy consumption. If Italy is so behind compared to something we've been talking about for 20 years, I wonder, when will Italians understand WEB3 or mass adoption?... Maybe we'll have to wait until 2030, not even 2025.

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That is an interesting argument. But what I am thinking as a very big difference is how centralized energy production is. I assume their energy is handled by the government or an organization, and they haven't been able to address this issue for a long time. But if Italy were to adopt what other countries are doing, and installing solar panels per house, then it could help with the energy issue. In Hawaii, a lot of houses tend to install one, and they even supply surplus energy back to the grid. This can also be viewed as a 'decentralization' of the power supply as well.

If we're looking at adoption in the last 20 years, Facebook [2004], Twitter [2006], Youtube [2005], Instagram [2010] all started within 20 years ago, and have had mass adoption. Web3 isn't a big corporation, but can be seen as a concept. It is easier for it to have mass adoption than you think.

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I really liked your words

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Thank you. I enjoyed our conversation as well. It made me think a lot haha

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Right now the performance of web3 video doesn't compare to YouTube. I think once that gap has been bridged it will be a landslide event.

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(Edited)

At the beginning of the post you talk about Youtube. The YouTubers who have managed to earn a lot of money are few, while those who have earned little are many, I belong to those who have not earned anything with Youtube. I believe that decentralized applications will replace centralized ones, but we are in 2024 and I see that many still use YouTube instead of an application like 3Speak.

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