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Agricultural Matters
Farmers earn more from YouTube than their crops
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<blockquote data-quote="Cheesehead" data-source="post: 8133807" data-attributes="member: 12876"><p>One Lonely Farmer I think on his Ag Talk and Raw was having a good laugh, he was saying all the ones he had seen were either way overstating the amount or way underestimating. The most money he reckons comes from sponsorship advertisement as though he didn't say which but to appear at one show firms have to pay for advertising in one of the US ag mags whose fees are extortionate so the firms have cottoned on to the fact that it is cheaper to pay a couple of thousand to a Youtuber to showcase their products and reach more people than pay a heck of a lot more for a photo or article in a magazine.</p><p></p><p>I was listening to a podcast the other day with Chet Larson on who was saying they don't actually take money when they have demos but if it is something they are interested in they'll demo it and be respectful but want to be able to be honest about how it turns out like with one of the cultivation implements they demoed the other year they had issues with it in their typical soil conditions and went over the good and bad in their circumstances with the rep who later on brought one that was better suited for what they were looking for and brought it. But they still get heat both online and locally because they get demo equipment to try though some seem more as though they're on lease with the manufacturer than on demo similar to how they lease their combines.</p><p></p><p>I listened to the same podcast as well though I have the 2nd one to actually still listen to it amazed me to hear the reasoning of some people that told him as he works for Versatile he shouldn't film or show other manufacturers equipment though one of the comments he made reminded me of the JD dealer thread on here.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cheesehead, post: 8133807, member: 12876"] One Lonely Farmer I think on his Ag Talk and Raw was having a good laugh, he was saying all the ones he had seen were either way overstating the amount or way underestimating. The most money he reckons comes from sponsorship advertisement as though he didn't say which but to appear at one show firms have to pay for advertising in one of the US ag mags whose fees are extortionate so the firms have cottoned on to the fact that it is cheaper to pay a couple of thousand to a Youtuber to showcase their products and reach more people than pay a heck of a lot more for a photo or article in a magazine. I was listening to a podcast the other day with Chet Larson on who was saying they don't actually take money when they have demos but if it is something they are interested in they'll demo it and be respectful but want to be able to be honest about how it turns out like with one of the cultivation implements they demoed the other year they had issues with it in their typical soil conditions and went over the good and bad in their circumstances with the rep who later on brought one that was better suited for what they were looking for and brought it. But they still get heat both online and locally because they get demo equipment to try though some seem more as though they're on lease with the manufacturer than on demo similar to how they lease their combines. I listened to the same podcast as well though I have the 2nd one to actually still listen to it amazed me to hear the reasoning of some people that told him as he works for Versatile he shouldn't film or show other manufacturers equipment though one of the comments he made reminded me of the JD dealer thread on here. [/QUOTE]
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