
Twitter’s
video platform Vine has been an unexpected money spinner for these Britons who
gave up their jobs to make a living from their Smartphone
For 21-year-old Ben Phillips, a £12,000
windfall is less than a minute away six seconds, to be precise.
All he needs to do is upload a clip
filmed on his smartphone to the social media platform Vine. If he mentions a
product or brand, that company will pay him thousands of pounds.
Now the Cardiff local gets paid up
to £2,000 for each second of promoted video he uploads.
Mr Phillips’ comedy clips include
playing pranks and acting sketches with his friends not high budget television
ads which have earned him the ear of advertisers.
But it’s not his homemade videos
that brands are interested in. They are queuing up to get a mention in the hope
that his 1.2 million followers will buy their products.
From shoe shop to shooting videos
Mr Phillips is one of a growing
group of young British "Viners" a small clique of smartphone users
who upload six-second home videos for anyone to watch.
His newfound internet stardom is a
far cry from his job in a shoe shop in South Wales, when last July he was
working and began uploading Vines in his spare time.
“I saw some lads in America were
getting loads of interest on this website, so I began with some comedy scenes,”
he said.
He said he had no idea that a chance
encounter with the website would turn into a lucrative business.
“I was working at my mum’s shop and
hadn’t a clue what Vine would turn into, no one was on it in the UK.”
Mr Phillips began by filming spots
with his then-girlfriend’s three-year-old son, Harley. He began a “Dr Harley”
series in which the toddler would give spoof medical advice. One instalment -
If you’ve got a boo boo, wash it, kiss it and plaster it! has been watched by
more than six million people.
A clip of the pair mooing while
seated in the back of a car received two million views (“loops,” Mr Phillips
calls them, explaining the Vine lingo).
A video of Harley tidying his room
to the riff of the White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army also surpassed the two
million loop mark.
Ben Phillips: 'We don't have
celebrity status'
Mr Phillips said the pair’s
popularity rocketed over night. “About two months after I started doing Vines
with my ex’s little boy Harley, we got around one million followers.”
At that point, advertisers began
knocking on his door. Car makers, clothing brands, mobile networks, and food
and drink producers were all keen to get a mention in his videos.
“I had companies saying ‘we want to
pay you to promote our product’ and management teams contacting me out of the
blue.”
Mr Phillips said he preferred to go
it alone, and began picking which brands to promote. “I’d only really promote
products that I would use. But it works when I do because we don’t have that
‘celebrity’ status we’re just ordinary people.”
Ben Phillips and friend in Two
strangers at an ATM (2 million views)
He said he would continue to create
videos on Vine but to make people laugh, not to make cash. “The money side of
it doesn’t really phase me because my sole intention is to show people skills
and cheer them up.
“Six seconds is enough to make
someone smile. People at work, if they’re really bored, can watch a couple of
videos and then get back on with the day.”
Mr Phillips recently returned from a
trip to Venice. “Just yesterday I was recording on my phone from a gondola I’m
trying to upload videos from landmarks across the world.”
His product coverage is eclectic,
ranging from covering up graffiti on his white car with Tipp-Ex (complete with
hashtag #TipexThursdays) to creating a promotional video for Nokia.
£2,000 a second: how?
For each video, Mr Phillips says
that advertisers will pay around £6,000 to £12,000 per vine.
A rate of £2,000 a second is hefty
even for large advertisers but Mr Phillips says it offers good value. “I can
guarantee a company one to seven million loops within 24 hours. What magazine
could offer that? I’m giving people phenomenal marketing.”
The key to getting an advertising
deal is simple: get more followers.
This is a market where individuals
can be picked up and dropped instantly. Rob Fishman, founder of social media
company Niche, said: “Whatever the media platform, anyone with a few thousand
followers is valuable to companies.”
But as soon as their popularity
wanes, advertisers will look towards the next big fad.
Lon Safko, author of the Social
Media Bible, said: “It’s all about the eyes. As a sponsor that’s all I care
about."
Mr Safko said the platform might not
be lasting. “Someone might be hot now, but a year from now, people will be
bored and move on to the next shiny object.
“It’s a fad that changes often,” he
said.
Daz Black: ‘One day they’ll get
bored’
East Sussex builder Daz Black
recently abandoned construction to concentrate on Vine full-time once he
reached the one million follower mark.
Mr Black, 29, said he was careful
about advertising products he wouldn’t buy himself. “I’ve got offers coming in
from all directions, but if I promote something that’s a con it will come back
to haunt me,” he said.
“If you blatantly advertise that
gets really annoying, but if you play it down people can enjoy the videos and
not notice the advertising is there.”
Mr Black, whose recent video, How
guys asked the father to marry their daughter, received 3.5m views, began using
Vine by “playing around and making stupid faces."
He said: “Ideas just come to me most
just randomly - I'm not sure if it’s talent or something I should be worried
about!”
Mr Black, from Staplecross, said he
was pursuing a career in comedy TV in case Vine lost popularity. "Vine’s
getting bigger and bigger but advertising may have a potential to kill it off.
“I know how the internet is I’m only
going to get older - maybe one day they’ll get bored of me.”
Black in ' Classic mum sayings '
(3.2 million views). He hopes to be a TV comedy actor.
How to cash in on social media
popularity
As a ballpark, Mr Safko said that
anyone with a few hundred thousand followers could get cash for promoting a
product in their videos.
He said: "You have to
accumulate a staggering amount of followers to make your video have any impact
and be worth anything to a sponsor."
Companies approach popular posters,
but wannabe social media 'stars' can be proactive by joining a go-between like
Niche.co or GrapeStory.
But Darren Barefoot, co-author of A
Social Media Marketing Handbook, said there was no guarantee that Vine would
stick around as a popular medium. "Right now it appeals to 18 to 25
year-olds, which is a user base that's valuable to advertisers but is also very
volatile," he said.
Mr Barefoot said that, for now, the
down-to-earth humour of Vine users kept them popular. "These people have a
raw and honest sense of humour that they can get across in six seconds. It's
enough time for one good joke."
But not everybody can amass millions
of followers over night. "All of the people who are making money now
didn't set it up to make an income - it was an accident," Mr Barefoot
said.
Free trip to NYC...
However, even people with a few
thousand followers get attention from brands - with freebies and trips up for
grabs for those who are followed.
Holly Graham, a compliance officer
from Edinburgh, uses Vine in her spare time and has amassed 17,600 followers
from her spoof Game of Thrones videos.
She said that although she would not
rule out making a career out of her "Lady Holly" account, she was
happy to keep it a hobby.
"I can go two months without
making a vine and then spend a night making 5 in a row," she said.
Ms Graham has been offered various
freebies from brands including concert tickets and a free trip to New York. She
said: "I’ve been contacted by a few companies to advertise certain things
in my Vine, mainly apps, but I haven’t done so yet as I haven't found one that
I’m particularly interested in."
Written by Kate Palmer in the
Telegraph - [email protected]
Britain's Social Media Stars Making £2,000 A Second
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
Rating:

No comments: