Stealth marketing: Microsoft paying YouTubers for Xbox One mentions

daze23

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http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2014/...osoft-paying-youtubers-for-xbox-one-mentions/

The line between traditional, paid advertising and organic editorial content on the Internet can sometimes be hazy. A recent stealth promotional campaign between Microsoft and Machinima highlights just how hazy that line has become, and how behind-the-scenes payments can drive ostensibly independent opinion-mongering on by users on services like YouTube.

This weekend, word started leaking of a new promotion offering Machinima video partners an additional $3 CPM (i.e., $3 per thousand video views) for posting videos featuring Xbox One content. The promotion was advertised by Machinima's UK community manager in a since-deleted tweet, and it also appears on Machinima's activity feed on Poptent, a clearinghouse for these kind of video marketing campaigns. The Poptent page also mentions an earlier campaign surrounding the Xbox One's launch in November, which offered an additional $1 CPM for videos "promoting the Xbox One and its release games."

To qualify for the campaign (and the extra payments), Machinima partners had to post a video including at least 30 seconds of Xbox One game footage that mentioned the Xbox One by name and included the tag "XB1M13." A YouTube search for that relatively unique term turns up "about 6,590 results," but a quick scan of those results shows only a few hundred that actually seem to be tagged for the Machinima promotion.

These kinds of payments aren't inherently suspect in and of themselves. If the video makers disclosed that Microsoft was paying extra for these videos, and if they were allowed to say whatever they wanted in those videos, then the whole thing could be seen as merely an unorthodox way to increase exposure for the Xbox One on YouTube.

That's not the case, however. According to a leaked copy of the full legal agreement behind the promotion, video creators "may not say anything negative or disparaging about Machinima, Xbox One, or any of its Games" and must keep the details of the promotional agreement confidential in order to qualify for payment. In other words, to get the money, video makers have to speak positively (or at least neutrally) about the Xbox One, and they can't say they're being paid to do so.

The arrangement as described might go against the FTC's guidelines for the use of endorsements in advertising, which demand full disclosure when there is "a connection between the endorser and the seller of the advertised product that might materially affect the weight or credibility of the endorsement." The document offers a specific example of a video game blogger who gets a free game system that he later talks about on his blog. That blogger would need to disclose that gift, the FTC says, because his opinion is "disseminated via a form of consumer-generated media in which his relationship to the advertiser is not inherently obvious." That same reasoning would seem to apply to the opinions expressed by the video makers participating in this promotion. Neither Microsoft nor Machinima responded immediately to a request for comment on the matter, but we'll let you know if and when we hear from them.

This kind of guerrilla online video advertising doesn't seem to be a major part of Microsoft's Xbox One marketing plan. According to the Machinima e-mail, Microsoft agreed to pay only for the first 1.25 million views in the promotion, putting the budget paid to video creators at a mere $3,750 (it's unclear if Machinima itself received any additional funds for facilitating the promotion). Poptent lists the campaign, which started on January 14, as "expired on January 16," suggesting that Microsoft has already reached that desired video view goal. That money may be pulling more than its weight, though, as those videos continue to attract additional views that Microsoft doesn't have to pay for directly.

Whatever you think about the practice, there's reason to believe this kind of stealth promotion of "consumer-generated media" is likely to get more popular going forward. As readers and viewers get better at ignoring explicit, traditional ads—or start blocking them entirely with browser-side scripts—marketers are going to continue to try finding new ways to get their message out there through supposedly unbiased content creators. Something to keep in mind the next time you watch a video or read something from someone who says they're just an average, everyday consumer.

 
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Don't see the big deal here. That's how these dudes make money, somebody pays them to say something about a product.:manny:

I think this is a disgusting practice. If they're paying people to say good things about their product, how can gamers know what's good and isn't?? I'm almost embarrased to be a Xbox One owner because now if I search online to find reviews i won't know which ones are being truthful or not. I bought into the hype that Xbox has lots of games but then noticed it wasn't much difference. I love me Halo though so I'll keep my Xbox One but I think I may get a PS4 and maybe Wii U for Bayonetta 2. Lol Sony isn't doing this right?? They seem to be much more for the gamer.
 

MeachTheMonster

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I think this is a disgusting practice. If they're paying people to say good things about their product, how can gamers know what's good and isn't?? I'm almost embarrased to be a Xbox One owner because now if I search online to find reviews i won't know which ones are being truthful or not. I bought into the hype that Xbox has lots of games but then noticed it wasn't much difference. I love me Halo though so I'll keep my Xbox One but I think I may get a PS4 and maybe Wii U for Bayonetta 2. Lol Sony isn't doing this right?? They seem to be much more for the gamer.

:camby: only quote me with your real account
 

Smooth3d

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This is not new. When Sony was giving all those "youtubers" free PS4's and games before launch. You think it was not implied to give them a favorable review? But go ahead and think everything neg is a MS invention.
 
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Heretic

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I'll just be real and say it. It's fukked up but I just don't give a shyt like most of the people in the world honestly. :yeshrug:
 

MeachTheMonster

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Why is it "fukked up" they are not asking anyone to lie.

They are asking people to talk about their product and they are paying them for it. It's no different than any other add or paid endorsement.

If the youtubers are lying to their audience then that's between them and their viewers it has nothing to do with Microsoft.
 
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Why is it "fukked up" they are not asking anyone to lie.

They are asking people to talk about their product and they are paying them for it. It's no different than any other add or paid endorsement.

If the youtubers are lying to their audience then that's between them and their viewers it has nothing to do with Microsoft.
I think they are and we as gamers shouldn't just accept this. I want to get games because people really like them, not because people really liked what a company paid them.
 
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