On an average, $1 for 1000 views. So 4 million views would mean about
$4000, could be more, could be less. It was reported that the Gangnam
Style video, which had over a billion views, made about $8 million.
But to be eligible to get a payout, you need to be a partner; once you get a good number of views, you'll easily be accepted.
YouTube doesn't pay you. Google Adsense does. And the earnings are based on the clicks and impressions on the ads displayed on your videos. So even if you have a billion views, but if you do not enable display of ads, you won't make a dime.
But to be eligible to get a payout, you need to be a partner; once you get a good number of views, you'll easily be accepted.
YouTube doesn't pay you. Google Adsense does. And the earnings are based on the clicks and impressions on the ads displayed on your videos. So even if you have a billion views, but if you do not enable display of ads, you won't make a dime.
In recent
years, hundreds of YouTubers have earned fame and fortune — million dollar
fortunes — solely through their work on their YouTube channels. For those on
the outside, it seems so simple: create and upload YouTube videos ranting about
life or of pranks being pulled on innocent bystanders, have people tune in to
watch the videos, and bam, next thing you know you’re buying a house next to
Reese Witherspoon in Beverly Hills.
But in
reality, becoming one of the top creators on YouTube takes consistency, a
nonstop work schedule and a growing audience that have chosen to spend their
valuable time watching your videos instead of the millions of others found on
YouTube. But the rise to million-dollar salaries has taken all of these
creators years to generate through their video-making hard work.
From data
exclusively supplied by YouTube analytics platform Social Blade, the
infographic depicts the average low and high salaries of the top 25 earning
creators solely based on the Adsense of their YouTube channels, or cost per
thousand impressions (CPM). Each creator earning was calculated by taking the
number of video views on the channel between January 1, 2012 to December 20,
2012 and multiplying it by the average low CPM of 70 cents and average high CPM
of $7 to find the estimated total low earnings and total high earnings. The
estimated earnings numbers do not include additional revenue earned from the
creators’ outside brand deals, sponsorships, affiliate campaigns or any other
income-earning ventures. The infographic also includes the estimated Adsense
revenue of the top three YouTube networks/studios, the top three Vevo channels
and the no. 1 earning YouTube channel overall.
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