Tag: TikTok ban

  • Substack expands video capabilities amid Tiktok uncertainty

    Substack expands video capabilities amid Tiktok uncertainty

    MUMBAI: The social media landscape is shifting, and Substack is seizing the moment. With Tiktok’s future in the U.S. hanging in the balance, the San Francisco-based startup is doubling down on video, aiming to lure creators looking for new ways to monetise their content. On 20 February, Substack announced that creators can now post video content directly through its app and place videos behind a paywall.

    “There’s going to be a world of people who are much more focused on videos,” said Substack co-founder Hamish McKenzie. “That is a huge world that Substack is only starting to penetrate.”

    One of those creators is Carla Lalli Music, a food content creator and cookbook author, who made a dramatic switch from Youtube to Substack. After posting nearly 200 videos, amassing hundreds of thousands of followers, and generating millions of views, Music quit Youtube. Why? The numbers didn’t add up. She earned almost $200,000 in revenue in just one year on Substack, a stark contrast to the losses she incurred producing videos for Youtube since 2021.

    “If I published four videos a month on Youtube, I’d earn about $4,000, but each video cost $3,500 to make,” Music said. “I was losing $10,000 a month.” Even with brand deals, the earnings barely covered production costs. Now, with her content behind a paywall, she’s focusing on writing another book, posting exclusive recipes, and selectively producing videos for Substack subscribers.

    Founded in 2017, Substack initially served as a newsletter platform where writers could charge readers a monthly subscription fee. The company raised $100 million, with its most recent valuation exceeding $650 million. Today, more than four million paid subscribers and over 50,000 creators generate income on the platform.

    With the uncertain future of Tiktok, Substack is aggressively expanding its offerings. Following Tiktok’s brief removal from Apple and Google’s app stores in January, Substack launched a $20 million fund to attract creators looking for a stable platform.

    “If Tiktok gets banned for political reasons, there’s nothing to do with the work you’ve done, but it really affects your life,” McKenzie said. “The only and surefire guard against that is if you don’t place your audience in the hands of some other volatile system who doesn’t care about what happens to your livelihood.”

    Now, Substack is courting video-first creators from competing platforms, offering them a place to own their audience without algorithms deciding who sees their content. Already, 82 per cent of Substack’s top 250 revenue-generating creators have integrated audio or video into their content.

    Unlike its previous video feature that only allowed clips in Notes-Substack’s front-facing feed—the new update lets creators monetise videos, track viewership, and measure revenue impact.

    For creators burned by unreliable earnings on other platforms, Substack’s paywalled video model offers a sustainable alternative. The company is betting that in a world where direct-to-fan revenue drives more than half of the $290 billion creator economy, the ability to monetise video will make its platform even more attractive.

  • Roposo claims to be India’s top short video app post TikTok ban

    Roposo claims to be India’s top short video app post TikTok ban

    NEW DELHI: With the Indian government on Monday banning 59 Chinese apps over concerns that these apps were engaging in activities that threatened “national security and defence of India, which ultimately impinges upon the sovereignty and integrity of India”, ByteDance’s TikTok had to say goodbye to India. 

    Roposo, the short video app with more than 65 million downloads, has been the number one social app on the Google Play Store in recent times.

    TikTok users, including influencers with huge fan followings have started switching to Roposo in large numbers after the ban, says the company. Influencers who have switched to Roposo include Prem Vats and Noor Afshan who had fan followings of 9.5 million and 9 million respectively on TikTok. MyGov, the citizen engagement platform founded by the government of India has already been present on Roposo.

    With Roposo, users finally have a way to enjoy responsible entertainment while showcasing their talent. Roposo is available in 12 Indian languages and has more than 14 million video creators and 80 million videos created monthly.

    “Our mission is to provide Indians with the largest talent platform that is truly Indian,” said co-founder Mayank Bhangadia. “We have built Roposo as a clean and ethical platform. The unique idea of channels in Roposo provides every talented Indian with an opportunity to grow rapidly.”

    A product of Indian minds, Roposo was founded by three IIT Delhi engineers and is owned by Glance. The platform centres around enabling every Indian to showcase their talent in their own unique way. The app’s ease of use combined with powerful video editing tools, and pre-existing communities that users can identify and interact with, in their mother tongue, has made Roposo a leading Made In India short video app. 

    InMobi group founder and CEO Naveen Tewari said, “As the number one short video app on the Google Play Store, Roposo is very well-positioned to lead this transformation in India. Roposo will continue to build on the trust and love that 65 million Indian users have placed in us.”

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