YouTube’s big bet: CTV first, Shorts paid, sports amplified
In a conference transcript, YouTube CEO Neal Mohan outlined YouTube’s growth priorities across creators, viewers, and monetization, highlighting connected TV as the primary way people watch YouTube in the U.S. and citing over a billion hours of watch time on CTV globally. Mohan reported ~20% YoY growth in Shorts engaged views (Q1 2025) and said Shorts revenue per watch hour has reached parity with long-form in-stream in some markets, while detailing ad innovations such as shoppable CTV formats, pause ads, and AI-driven Demand Gen efficiency improvements. He also discussed YouTube’s subscription and sports strategy, including YouTube TV’s 8M+ subscribers, 45 Primetime Channels, YouTube Music & Premium at 125M subscribers, and an expanded NFL partnership including Sunday Ticket and an exclusive kickoff-week Brazil game available broadly on YouTube and YouTube TV.
Key Takeaways
- CTV is now YouTube’s center of gravity: primary U.S. viewing surface, 1B+ watch-hours globally, and a major ad innovation lane (QR/shoppable CTV, pause ads, deeper ad pods).
- Shorts momentum continues: ~20% YoY growth in engaged views (Q1’25); Shorts revenue per watch hour has reached parity with long-form in-stream in some markets (including the U.S.).
- Performance advertising is driving growth: YouTube Ads grew 10% YoY, led by direct response; Demand Gen delivered a reported 26% YoY improvement in cost per conversion per dollar.
- Subscriptions are now a second engine: YouTube TV has 8M+ subs; YouTube Music & Premium is at 125M subs, with Premium Lite positioned as a lower-price on-ramp.
- Sports is a product+creator wedge: expanded NFL partnership (Sunday Ticket + exclusive Brazil kickoff-week game broadly on YouTube/YouTube TV) and features like Multiview/Watch With to differentiate distribution.
Why It Matters
The “YouTube is mobile” narrative is obsolete; Mohan is effectively describing YouTube as the living-room default layer, where ad formats (pause ads, shoppable QR) and sports UX (Multiview, creator co-viewing) can reshape TV economics. Shorts monetization reaching parity in some markets signals TikTok-style time spent no longer has to be a revenue discount—bad news for anyone betting on YouTube’s mix shift as a permanent margin drag. Meanwhile, subscriptions (Premium, Lite, YouTube TV, Primetime Channels) make YouTube less ad-cycle dependent and more of an aggregator—pressuring streamers, OEMs, and legacy TV bundles alike.
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