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Saturday, September 17, 2016

I Had This Question from a long time since now

 I Had this question from a long time since now.

I had this question from a long time since now. I have to tell you that it depends. You canearn money on youtube as people watch your videos. The more the people would watch your videos the more is the chance that you earn money.
Content marketing is exploding. It makes sense, as a written article or produced video can convey more information and users actually choose to read/watch it. Companies are willing to pay content marketers, including YouTubers, big dollars to have them promote their product.
So how much do they really make? Well, let’s look first at how much companies pay them to promote a product and secondly let’s look at how much YouTube pays them to run ads.
How Much do You Pay a YouTuber to Promote Your Product. Obviously this varies widely depending on the YouTuber’s audience and the marketing objective. In general, YouTubers typically charge around $10,000 per 100,000 views. It’s difficult to predict how many views a native video will get, so that is the risk an advertiser takes.
How Much YouTube Pays YouTubers Per View. Once the YouTuber links Google AdSense to their channel, they make 68% of the ad revenue. YouTube charges advertisers when a viewer watches 30 seconds or more of the ad, and typically charges around $.18 per view. Only about 15% of viewers will be counted as a “paid view” since many of them skip.
So if you have 1,000 views to your video and 15% actually watch the ad, then you would have 150 paid views. At $.18 per view, this would equate to $27 total charged to the advertiser. As the content creator you get 68% of that, so you would average around $18 per 1,000 views.
Here is the another way. This guy has explained in a very good way.

There are many varying factors, but here are a few things to bare in mind:

• An average CPM (Cost Per Mil/ Cost Per Thousand Views) is around $1.50
• This fluctuates depending on the type of content you create. If you make content like HowToBasic, no one wants to advertise on your channel. If you make content like Zoella, everyone wants to advertise on your channel.
• If you're with an MCN your CPM could be more like $4.
• YouTube take 45% of AdSense
• MCN's typically take 50%. However, with 1m subscribers they're likely to offer you a 90:10 deal or even 100%. Aka, you get to keep 100% of your revenue because they simply want you on their network because it looks good
• Direct brand endorsements either via an MCN or found through websites like Peg.coyou could easily be looking at around £10k - £30k for 1 video. An MCN typically take around 70%. Peg takes nothing because the brands pay an upfront fee to use the tool.
• You can also use sites like Patreon to allow fans to support you directly. I have a YouTuber friend on 450k subs who gets around £1,000 per video in donations from his fans.

Hope this helps.

Pewdiepie with about 45 million subscribers made 12 million dollars in 2015
Whereas Lilly Singh aka. Superwomen made 2.5 million with her 9 million subscribers (including me) in 2015.
If you’ll notice the amount they made is a fraction of the number of subscribers, they have.
So 1M followers doesn’t count as much
They are quite popular faces on YouTube so you can say some of their earnings also comes from influencer marketing and endorsing random stuff.
Talking about just monetizing, many answers have already explained how it works.
Monetizing pays in CPM (i.e. Cost Per Mille) which varies from 1$ to 7$ per CPM. So there’s no exact figure that can be predicted.
You can check you rates by following these steps on your YouTube:
Step1: Open creator studio.
Step2: Go to Analytics > Ad rates.
To know more factors that affect monetizing read this Ad rates report - YouTube Help

Our platform helps thousands of YouTube stars of varying sizes find sponsorship opportunities with brands.  As a rule, pricing is typically based on:
  1. The number of expected views a YouTuber can expect to receive on a given video
  2. How involved the video is in promoting that brand (dedicated, mention or product placement)
If a channel is expected to get 300k visits to a video (which is a very high engagement rate for only 1mm subscribers), they'll be able to charge between $6,000 and $20,000 for a sponsorship, depending on the content involved. Their earnings on pre-roll ads tend to be much smaller, in the hundreds of dollars per video in this case.

Of course, these earnings are gross of any commission you may have to pay to an MCN, agent or manager, if you've got one (which in the example above, you almost certainly do).

These prices will also scale proportionally on how big the channel is, so channels of more up-and-coming stars might be open to working for gifted product or less money as their star is on the rise.

For creators looking to see what kinds of sponsorship opportunities you can get today, check out Revfluence.  For brands interested in more data, check out our Example Campaign calculator.

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