The Try Guys say their subscription strategy is working

Mobile

After a rough couple years, YouTube creators The Try Guys said they’re on-track to reach profitability, with subscriptions to their three-month-old, ad-free service 2nd Try now accounting for 20% of the company’s revenue.

Of course, those numbers also mean The Try Guys remain reliant on other revenue streams, including YouTube advertising. But in an interview with CNBC, co-founder Zach Kornfeld said the service is exceeding expectations — and the goal is to keep growing until 2nd Try becomes their biggest source of money.

Beyond their popular videos and series, The Try Guys are also infamous for a scandal in which one of the group’s co-founders was caught having an affair with an employee — a scandal that also damaged the group’s relationship with advertisers.

“Our company was operating at a loss for essentially two years,” Kornfeld said. “We got to a point where it cost more money for us to make the shows our audience loved than we got in from YouTube.”

Another group of popular YouTubers launched a separate subscription service, Watcher Entertainment, earlier this year, provoking fan backlash over a plan to limit the amount of episodes released for free on YouTube.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Thanks, Netflix, but we don’t need another daily word game
TikTok parent ByteDance reportedly values itself at $300 billion
Here’s the full list of 44 US AI startups that have raised $100M or more in 2024
Norwegian startup Factiverse wants to fight disinformation with AI
Solar power magnate Gautam Adani and others indicted over alleged $250M bribery scheme

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *