Home Business Pocket.Watch built YouTube’s Ryan ToysReview into $22 million empire – Business Insider

Pocket.Watch built YouTube’s Ryan ToysReview into $22 million empire – Business Insider

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Pocket.Watch built YouTube’s Ryan ToysReview into $22 million empire – Business Insider

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Kids entertainment company Pocket.Watch takes YouTube stars like Ryan ToysReview and turns their online brands into lucrative empires. Kerry Tucker, chief marketing officer at Pocket.Watch, spoke to Business Insider about how the company takes a self-produced YouTube channel and turns it into a multimillion-dollar franchise.  Using strategic partnerships with companies like Walmart, Amazon, and Nickelodeon, Pocket.Watch takes clients past YouTube and gets them in front of kids even when the screens are turned off. Tucker broke down the company’s strategy, from tracking data on Generation Alpha (zero to 9 years old) to staying ahead of the curve by listening closely to what kids are consuming.Click here for more BI Prime stories.YouTube star Ryan Kaji of Ryan ToysReview has a massive following of 22 million subscribers.But to become the world’s top-earning YouTuber at an estimated $22 million a year, his face had to go on the shelves of Walmart, on toothbrushes, and on TV. To do so, his team enlisted the help of kids entertainment company Pocket.Watch. Pocket.Watch takes brands that start on YouTube and gets them in front of kids in multiple arenas. “Most creators are creating out of their homes, and really good at what they do in mobilizing audiences through great content,” Kerry Tucker, chief marketing officer at Pocket.Watch, told Business Insider. “Behind that, they are not seasoned professionals who know how to take themselves off of YouTube and into other things, or even that they have the opportunity to do that.” The company thinks of itself as an full-service entertainment studio, like a smaller scale Disney or Nickelodeon for internet creators, she said.It targets Generation Alpha (zero to 9) and works with a small group of internet creators like HobbyKids TV (3.7 subscribers), CaptainSparklez (10.7 million subscribers), EvanTubeHD (6 million subscribers), and JillianTubeHD (1.5 million subscribers).

HobbyKids Adventures is an animated web TV series produced by PocketWatch for YouTube.
Pocket.Watch

From a self-produced YouTube channel to a multimillion-dollar franchise Pocket.Watch wants its creators to be on the screens kids are watching and the toys they pick up after the screen is turned off. “Everything from toys, to toothbrushes, to television shows,” Tucker said.Take 8-year-old Kaji, whose channel started from the occasional 5-minute toy unboxing videos in 2015. Pocket.Watch acts as an agent for Kaji’s brand, “Ryan’s World,” and has invested in building an empire around the YouTube star.The company brought the “Ryan’s World” brand to Colgate, Nickelodeon, Bonkers Toys, Roku, and Walmart, expanding Kaji off YouTube. Tucker credits Bonkers, the toy manufacturing company which produced the “Ryan’s World Giant Mystery Egg,” with Ryan ToysReview branding, for taking the first “leap of faith” in Kaji. Read more: Inside the toy business of YouTube star Ryan ToysReview, the 8-year-old boy who makes $22 million per yearSince then, Pocket.Watch developed and launched an entire line of “Ryan’s World” consumer products with Bonkers, and created and produced “Ryan’s Mystery Play date” which airs on Nickelodeon.

Ryan Kaji’s YouTube channel, “Ryan ToysReview,” has 22 million subscribers.
Bonkers Toys

Building partnerships with major retailers like Walmart, Target, and media companies like Nickelodeon and RokuPocket.Watch works closely with Nickelodeon, Walmart, Target, and Amazon, looking at data and trends to see what’s working and where to move next, Tucker said. The company relies on its partnerships. Those partnerships start with thinking about the audience, Tucker said. Where does this generation live? What do they want from content and characters?”It’s not so different from the past,” Tucker said. “They want them on their toothbrushes, backpacks, and other screens in their homes.” Tucker said Pocket.Watch tracks data on Generation Alpha to stay ahead of the curve and listens closely to what kids are consuming.

Ryan Kaji.
Pocket.Watch

Trends and challengesThe biggest challenge is saying no to things that aren’t “brand right,” Tucker said, and keeping up with the pace. Challenges rise any time YouTube or Google changes something internally, she said. But the company has a strong relationship with Google and will “always know what is happening a little bit ahead of time,” which is common among big YouTube-focused companies. Managers with tight relationships with Google will get word of news prior, to prepare clients, for instance. She said Pocket.Watch is anticipating changes to Google within the next year that could affect its kids-focused creators.Earlier this year, Ryan ToysReview was hit with FTC complaints, accused of “deceiving” the young audience with sponsored content.But Pocket.Watch isn’t worried, Tucker said. “Certainly anything that protects the safety and wellness for kids is good,” she said. “We are all good with the regulations, we just want to make sure our creators can navigate it well, and also it showcases how diversifying their revenue streams is important.”If a creator is solely dependent on YouTube and something happens — from restrictions to new platform regulations — that can hurt business. YouTube creators should be moving into new platforms and building businesses outside of YouTube to protect themselves, she said.That is also, conveniently, Pocket.Watch’s special ity.Check out these Business Insider Prime posts for more on Ryan ToysReview:Inside the toy business of YouTube star Ryan ToysReview, the 8-year-old boy who makes $22 million per year: We spoke to Deborah Stallings Stumm, senior vice president of sales and marketing at toy manufacturing company Bonkers Toys, on what makes a successful partnership between a toy company and an influencer. The financial adviser to the world’s top-earning YouTube star shares the tips he gives clients to kick-start their businesses: Michael Bienstock, Semaphore’s chief executive, on assisting clients like Ryan of Ryan ToysReview (and his parents), who makes $22 million a year off of his YouTube channel.

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