Sounds like a nice hobby that will make a few nickels to make you feel better about doing the videos but definitely not an enterprise.
Sounds like a nice hobby that will make a few nickels to make you feel better about doing the videos but definitely not an enterprise.
I know that people post videos to YouTube and from getting certain numbers of views they get paid. I know the some pro players do this sort of thing and from what I hear they can get a payment from it.
How lucrative is this sort of thing?
If were entirely worth it, you'd at least see an Annual 5K or 10K added POV Pool Sponsored Tournament from me, but you don't.
Even with our existing sponsors and 'active social networks, I'm still trying to find the magic bullet.
This said, I don't think I'll ever stop promoting and streaming pool to the masses - I do what I love, I love what I do.
Keep Loving Pool!
VERY. as long as it's not pool related of course![]()
There are folks in the video gaming areas that are making 6 figures showing kids how to play/win at certain popular video games with his expert advice, and multiple screen shots to show certain things.
7 figures for many.
One of the top YouTube earners is a couple of pre-teens opening and playing/reviewing toys.
http://fusion.net/story/38924/the-h...-million-just-by-opening-disney-toy-packages/
Exactly. No one in pool can possibly be making enough off ad revenue to live on. You need views in consistent millions and full ad impressions and click-throughs to get any real money.
However for your OWN stuff, it's great. YouTube pays off for me much more than posting on this forum does for example.[/QUOTE]
Absolutely, I can see that. I might be interested in some cases...plural...probably 1 by 2s to start.
Was just reading about a situation where a guy posted a video and some gal with hundreds of thousands of subscribers reposted the video and it got millions in views credited to her pay stream. The original poster didn't get paid anything for the hits on his video uploaded to some else's account. Fair?