Making Money from animated shorts
Making Money from Animated Shorts
Making money. A topic that is rarely discussed on this blog, and one
that artists tend to stay away from, fearing ideas like “Selling out” or
“compromising your art”. However, I believe this is an important issue
to talk about, especially for artists, since the art-school system is
lacking when it comes to educating students about it.
I’ve recently been asked if it’s even possible to make money by
creating animated shorts. My short answer is, yes. Here’s the long
version.
Not the best business model
First I should say that making animated shorts isn’t the best thing to build a business around. I know it’s funny coming from me, but it’s true. It takes a long time to make shorts, and the financial benefits are often small.Having said that, there are ways to monetize making films, and here are a few you can consider.
YouTube views:
This method is the simplest one, but probably the least effective.
You make a short, upload it to YouTube, monetize your channel by
enabling ads and watch the money flows.
Here’s why it’s not the most effective method, though: Let’s say you
make 2 animated shorts per year, which is INCREDIBLY hard to do. Then,
let’s say each short gets 5 Million views by some stroke of luck from
the virality God. Your total revenue for that year will then be around
$10,ooo. And again, that’s with the unlikely scenario of managing to
produce 2 very popular animated shorts in one year.
YouTube not a great platform for animators because it relies on watch
time and frequency of uploads. These two factors create a lot of
difficulty for animators, since it takes such a long time to create a
short animation, and it’s usually pretty short. That’s one of the
reasons gaming channels do so well, they upload almost every day and
their videos can go on for a long long time.
However, there is a way an animation channel can do great on YouTube,
and that’s by creating content around your shorts. This is what I’ve
done since the beginning. Uploading making-of videos, tutorials and
production-vlogs. If you only upload your shorts you will have a hard
time getting traction, but if you create some momentum around it with
other content, you will have an easier time growing on YouTube.
The more popular YouTube animators often resort to a limited
animation style, more similar to an animatic, and almost always in 2D.
That way they can produce much more videos. Here is the list of some of My favorite YouTube animation channels.
Selling your short
Selling your animated short directly to your audience can be much
more profitable. Say you sell it for $5, you will only need 2000 views
to get to that $10,000 figure we talked about earlier. But that also
means you’ll have to get 2000 people to buy your film, which isn’t an
easy task, especially if you haven’t spent time building an audience.
Here are some of the ways you can sell your short directly to your audience:
Vimeo on Demand
Probably the easiest and cheapest solution for the less tech-savvy
people, or for those who does not have a large audience. For $199/year
plus 10% of your earnings, you’ll be able to sell your animated short
directly on Vimeo.
Just like selling on Amazon, the big advantage here is the exposure to a
large pool of primed viewers, willing to pay to watch quality films. If
you don’t have your own audience, adding yourself to a large searchable
source of films might be a good way to find your customers.
Amazon / iTunes
I don’t have experience with selling on these platforms, but I know
that many people use them. iTunes could get costly (sometimes paying
thousands to aggregators for posting your film) and Amazon can be used
for free. You’ll have to do a bit more research on that if that’s the
path you think about taking.
Sell on you own site
This is something I have more experience with. If you have your own site, and have built some kind of following, you can sell your shorts directly to them. There are many tools for selling digital products, here are just a few I’m familiar with, either from personal use or from recommendations:- Easy Digital Downloads (A shopping cart plugin for WordPress)
- Gumroad (A super easy-to-use tool for selling digital products)
- Woocommerce (The most popular shopping cart plugin)
- Wistia (A high-quality video hosting company, for hosting your animated short)
- Amazon S3 (Amazon’s cloud storage tool, for letting your customers download your film to their computers)
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