Some traditional content companies finally got their act together and announced a communal video distribution site. So is YouTube toast?
No.
How is it not toast? Let us count the ways.
First, there’s the smart point that Fortune’s Adam Lashinsky makes in his piece today: Hobbling YouTube would be a tough enough job for an as-yet-to-be-named-built-or-launched site run by ONE big media company. So imagine how hard it will be when each of SIX big media companies is fiercely looking after its own interests, pointing fingers, spreading blame, demanding changes, etc., before the site even gets up and running.
Second, big media video content is NOT the only kind of video that Internet users want. On the contrary, a recent review of Vidmeter, YouTube’s most popular channels, and compete.com’s analysis of what happened to YouTube’s traffic when the 100,000 Viacom videos were deleted (up 14% in two weeks, per the NY Times), suggests that Jon Stewart et al clips comprise a far smaller percentage of total online video content than most people think.
Third, online video will NOT be a winner-take-all game. Even if BIGMEDIAVIDEO.com actually gets up and running–a real "if," in my opinion–and even if YouTube chooses not to license or otherwise distribute the content, there will be plenty of room for multiple players. The experience and know-how that YouTube has developed over the past two years, moreover, will continue to give the company a major operating advantage, especially at scale.
Fourth, unless BIGMEDIAVIDEO.com 1) maintains a chokehold on ALL professionally produced content–something that sounds next to impossible, given that many companies have yet to join the consortium–and 2) builds a powerful consumer brand, YouTube will still be the first stop for many Internet users interested in video clips. Although Viacom probably assumes otherwise, many Jon Stewart fans probably have no idea what company produces his show (and, therefore, don’t think to look on comedycentral.com). By now, however, most consumers think that youtube=online video, the same way that google=search, so youtube may always be the first stop for many of them. And once it decides to aggregate links to all online video, there is nothing to stop YouTube from employing–and making a lot of money off of–the same model that has made Google the most powerful media company in the world: sponsored search.