For months, YouTubers have complained that their view counts are down. New data from the third-party stat tracker SocialBlade confirms what YouTubers fear: viewership is lower āacross the board.ā
SocialBlade crunched some numbers for Kotaku and determined that, since the first half of the year, YouTube views are now 5-7% lower. Between July and September, that decrease was 10%. Itās pretty significant.
Hereās the graph they drew up:
SocialBlade Community Manager Danny Fratella explained over e-mail how he put together the graph:
āI started by pulling daily view/sub growth data from January 1, 2016 ā November 30, 2016 for every channel with more than 10 million subscribers. From there, I weeded out channels that werenāt actually YouTube personalities; accounts managed by record labels (like VEVO channels) and television studios (like The Ellen Show), primarily. That left us with 49 of the biggest channels on YouTube.ā
SocialBlade says their metrics are reliable. They pull data directly from YouTubeās API. But over Twitter on Monday, YouTube accused some third party apps of poorly representing subscriber activity, pointing directly to SocialBlade. SocialBlade fired back that they donāt make up data, adding that āour data is only as good as what weāre able to get from you:).ā
Ouch ;( We don't make up data. We get it from the YouTube API. We rely on it for accuracy. If it has issues maybe ping them?
ā Social Blade (@SocialBlade) December 20, 2016
Itās worth noting that YouTubeās view-counting algorithm is unknown because itās proprietary. But Fratella says āwe know that watch time plays a role, but there are likely many other metrics taken into account.ā
Why YouTube views have gone down is unclear, but some good theories are floating around. Fratella pointed to two potential causes:view auditsand altered video-promoting algorithms. During view audits, YouTubers donāt actually lose views. YouTube is removing botted or invalid playbacks from the view count. This happens all at once in a sort of purgeāsomething YouTube has explained publicly. But now that YouTubers have tools like SocialBlade to more rigorously moderate their data, they may be noticing these purges more, Fratella suggested.
He added that SocialBlade doesnāt see view counts purged as often as subscriber countsāthe main complaint going around YouTube communities. Although YouTubers have widely complained that fans are now randomly unsubscribed from their channels, YouTube and SocialBlade both told me that theyāve noticed nothing out of the ordinary in subscription data.
YouTubeās video-promoting algorithm may also play a role in an apparent decreased viewership. What videos the platform draws more eyes to reflects their philosophy on what videos should go viral. Fratella directed me to a YouTube video by Derek Muller (Veritasium) in which he speculates on why more widely distributed video promotion could affect views. So, for example, when a channel with millions of subscribers regularly puts out a video, the latest of those videos may not deserve to go as viral as some guyās rapidly-shared cellphone video of a breaking news event.
For more on that:
Why views are 5-7% lower across the board may have nothing to do with audits or promotion algorithms. It may be a ghost, or the hand of God. Who knows? With SocialBladeās stats, the decrease at least feels more tangible. The mysterious subscription declines, however, are still mysterious.
*The articleās original headline read, āYouTube Views Are Down Across The Board, Analysis Says.ā