Facebook owned social network, Instagram launched a mobile app on Wednesday called IGTV dedicated
to user-generated videos up to an hour long, intensifying the
competition for consumers’ time among ad-supported streaming services
such as YouTube.
The service plans to feature videos from rising internet celebrities,
artists and pets, some of whom have tens of millions of social media
followers.
“Teens are now watching 40 percent less TV than they did five years
ago,” Instagram Chief Executive Kevin Systrom said at an event to
announce the launch in San Francisco. “It’s time for video to move
forward and evolve.”
Facebook shares rose 2.3 percent on Wednesday to $202.06 after
earlier crossing the $200 mark for the first time. Instagram, which was
founded in 2010 as a photo-sharing app, has surpassed 1 billion users,
Systrom said.
Tech firms such as Facebook, Alphabet Inc’s YouTube and Snap Inc’s
Snapchat have been spending heavily to grow mobile video services that
will attract both users and corporate brand advertising.
Courting stars to post videos is part of their strategies. Instagram
said it has signed up personalities such as Lele Pons, who has 25
million Instagram followers, for IGTV.
Pons said she did not plan to choose sides between two of Silicon
Valley’s largest companies. “I’m still going to be posting on YouTube as
well as on Instagram,” she told reporters.
Facebook on Tuesday launched a separate effort to lure video makers
away from YouTube, offering ways to make money on the Facebook app.
YouTube said it plans to update its commercialization options this week.
Instagram does not immediately plan to share revenue with video
creators but may in the future, Systrom said. IGTV will be available as
part of Instagram’s app and as a separate app, he said.
The service does not have advertising at launch, but research firm
eMarketer said it expects it will have ads eventually, and that
marketers in the meantime will sign up stars for endorsement deals.
As social media “influencers” have gained popularity, “I only wonder
why it took Instagram so long to roll this out,” eMarketer analyst Debra
Aho Williamson said. Instagram, which Facebook bought in 2012 for $1
billion, has grown by adding features like messaging and short videos.
In 2016, it added the ability to post slideshows that disappear in 24
hours, a copy of Snapchat’s popular “stories” feature.
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