dailymotion.pngDailymotion, a Paris, France-based video-sharing site that’s a distant competitor to YouTube, has raised $34 million in funding, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The site, like many others, lets you share personal videos privately with friends or publicly with anyone. Like its competitors, people can also comment on each other’s videos, embed Dailymotion video clips in other sites, tag videos, view selected channels, etc.

However, Dailymotion has distinguished itself by tailoring its site to country locations. In France, it offers a French language site, and does community-building events there — for example, it months ago it started foster debate among French politicians, before YouTube started something similar here in the U.S. Dailymotion is neck and neck with YouTube for top ranked video site in that country. Dailymotion does something similar in Germany and other European countries. It lets people click on a flag icon at the top, for example the UK’s flag, if they want to view the site in English (see below)

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Other distant competitors to YouTube have also raised large amounts of funding recently. Metacafe raised $30 million last week, Veoh raised $26 million in June.

One might call these sites also-rans compared to YouTube — YouTube has 61.77 percent of the US market, for example, while Daily Motion has 0.76 percent, according to Hitwise (table below). Internationally, the news is better for the company, as it was the ninth-fastest growing site on the web in May, with 28 million users, according to Comscore.

With these large cash infusions, these video sites may better described as also-runnings, not also rans. Video sites are expensive to run because they require the constant transfer of large amounts of video data between their own servers and end user’s computers — and need cash to pay for large amounts of traffic.

The hope of these investors, maybe, is that consumer web companies with solid traffic levels are still attractive purchases even if they aren’t market leaders. Many larger media companies are looking to establish their own online video brands, and have the money to buy their way into the market.

For example, Fotolog, a photo-sharing site not unlike Flickr (purchased last year by Yahoo) and Photobucket (purchased months ago by Fox/Myspace) was itself purchased last week by French media firm Hi-Media for $90 million.

New investors include Advent Venture Partners LLP and AGF Private Equity, which is a division of Allianz AG. Previous investors, Atlas Ventures and Partech International, participated in the round.

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  1. VentureBeat » Roundup: Joost’s API, Fliqz’s easy video toolbar, NBC-iTunes rift, more said:

    [...] and a solid grounding in how peer-to-peer video-sharing works. But, a lot of other big video sites, like Dailymotion, Veoh and Metacafe, have their own ideas about the future of online video, and they are raising big [...]

  2. VentureBeat » Strike this: How to make money from online video sites said:

    [...] (our coverage): The Paris-based company is big in the francophone world, and made a push into the US starting [...]

  3. Veoh is raising a round, claims to be pretty big and growing » VentureBeat said:

    [...] rivals have also raised large amounts of money. Two examples: Last year, DailyMotion raised $30 (our coverage) and MetaCafe raised $34 million (our coverage). Hosting and streaming lots of videos gets [...]

  4. May 12th, 2008
    5:12 pm

    36b3949dceb9 said:

    36b3949dceb9…

    36b3949dceb92c00f743…

3 Comments

  1. Fred Destin said:

    It is worth taking the global view on DailyMotion. from a strong French base it’s become a truly international site with 37M uniques and good penetration in the US, Japan, UK and Germany. Our site centric data shows a large number of users in each of these countries with great usage patterns. We think this can go a long way.

  2. April 5th, 2008
    4:29 am

    Nicole Linkletter said:

    Hello webmaster…. i was searching for germany flag and i came across your post and it is definitely the most sensible thing i have seen in a long time, and in my opinion you got something good going here, i have to get my friends to subscribe to your post about VentureBeat.

  3. April 5th, 2008
    11:25 am

    Nigella Lawson said:

    Hi…. i was searching for country flag and i came across your post and it is definitely the most sensible thing i have seen in a long time, and in my opinion you got something good going here, i have to get my friends to subscribe to your post about VentureBeat.

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