Starting September 2, the platform will begin showing abbreviated subscriber counts for channels with 1,000 or more subscribers.
Creators will still be able to see their exact subscriber numbers in YouTube Studio and YouTube analytics. YouTube offered examples of how this will impact public-facing subscriber counts, explaining that channels with 12,345 subscribers would show a subscriber count of 12.3K, channels with 1,234,567 would show 1.23M, and channels with 123,456,789 subscribers would display a subscriber count of 123M.
“This addresses creator concerns about stress and well-being, specifically around tracking public subscriber counts in real-time,” wrote a YouTube team member on the site’s Community Forum Blog, “We hope this helps all creators focus on telling their story, and experience less pressure about the numbers.”
Why we should care
Abbreviating subscriber numbers for YouTube channels could potentially impact creators and brands searching for influencer partnerships. For creators, the change means that brands may not get an accurate sense of their popularity on the platform — especially for niche influencers whose following isn’t as substantial as a channel with hundreds of millions of followers. Even for the channels with hundreds of millions of followers, if they’re at 120,450,000, their 120M subscriber count will be short more than 400,000.
Brands will have to rely on channel owners for exact subscriber counts. Of course, screenshots of their official numbers from the YouTube Studio or the YouTube Data Analytics platform would easily confirm subscriber counts — but there’s always a chance a brand may dismiss a potential influencer without even asking for an official subscriber number if the number listed is lower than what they want in a partner.
As Martyn Littlewood notes in the forum thread, subtracting 300,000+ subscribers from a channel’s subscriber number leaves a lot of people — and progress for the channel — unaccounted for.
“Business partners could go elsewhere if they believe their quota can’t be met — alternatively it could low ball initial offers from them and undermine brand deal opportunities. Sure, you could argue that they [brands] will get in touch, then you can send accurate information, but what if they never call at all?” asks Littlewood in his comment.
More on the news
- YouTube first announced it would be changing how it displayed public-facing subscriber numbers back in May.
- While this change will be rolling out on YouTube September 2, it will not begin rolling out on the public YouTube Data API Service until the week of September 9.
- Instagram has made similar changes on its platform, experimenting with removing “Like” counts from posts.