Online video continues to explode, Google’s grip tightens

comScore has just released its April analysis of online video consumption in the United States and once again, the market is expanding and Google’s dominance continues to grow right along with it.

The numbers below make this clear:

In March, Americans watched 9.8 billion videos, down from a high of 10.1 billion in December of 2007. (coverage)  Google’s properties, YouTube and Google Video (almost entirely YouTube), accounted for approximately 3.63 billion, or 34.3%, of those views, with Fox Interactive Media (led by MySpace) far behind in second place, with around 584 million, or 6%.

In April, video intake regained its momentum. Americans watched 11 billion online videos and Google had 37.9% of them. Fox dropped to 557 million, or 5.1%. Yahoo! and Microsoft were next on the list, with around 352 million (3.2%) and 268 million (2.4%) respectively.

Overall, almost 3/4ths of Americans with Internet access are now consuming online video, spending an average of 228 minutes doing so per month. One small but fascinating statistic is that the average duration of an individual online video was 2.8 minutes, suggesting that attention span shrinkage is not at all limited to the written word.

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About the Author, Dan Kaplan

Once upon a time, Dan considered himself a magazine journalist with dreams of "The New Yorker" and a couple of well-reviewed but only mildly successful books. Then one day, life, as it is known to do, decided it was time for rebirth. Like so many things before it, this rebirth was conceived on a mostly-empty plane to Reno. Now, instead of magazine writing, Dan would plunge into the world of New Media and write for Matt Marshall's blog.

It's funny how it goes.