TikTok and Instagram chase TV growth—but can they match YouTube’s model?

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

TikTok and Instagram are pushing beyond the smartphone. Both platforms are reportedly preparing TV apps in an effort to capture longer engagement sessions and lean-back audiences—an arena where YouTube already dominates. On the surface, this looks like the next logical step. If users are already binging short-form content on mobile, why not scale that habit to the biggest screen in the house?

But the move isn’t just late—it’s strategically misaligned. YouTube’s strength on TV isn’t due to format ubiquity. It’s the result of a decade spent building content infrastructure, creator incentives, and ad ecosystems tailored to long-form, passive viewing. TikTok and Instagram, by contrast, are mobile-native through and through. Their economics, content formats, and user rituals weren’t designed for the living room. Retrofits don’t equal readiness.

YouTube’s dominance on connected TVs is structural, not accidental. More than half of US households now consume YouTube on their televisions, and it’s not because of screen mirroring or habit bleed. It’s because the platform architected for format fluidity—long-form content, high creator retention, and monetization models suited to extended watch sessions.

Critically, YouTube trained both creators and advertisers to think in TV-compatible units: mid-rolls, multi-part content, narrative arcs. Its recommendation algorithm doesn’t just reward viral hits—it supports thematic consistency and episodic depth. This infrastructure created an ecosystem where creators want to produce for TV—and where advertisers know how to buy against it.

Meanwhile, TikTok and Instagram still rely on swipe-driven virality. Their creators optimize for instant hooks, not lingering narratives. Their advertisers chase attention bursts, not brand lift. Simply launching a TV app doesn’t change those fundamentals.

The pivot to TV exposes a core strategic tension for TikTok and Instagram: they’re optimized for repeat taps, not extended sessions. On mobile, it works brilliantly. Users scroll, pause, engage, and repeat—hundreds of times a day. But TVs demand a different kind of engagement. The expectation is passive consumption, background co-viewing, or lean-back immersion.

That behavior doesn’t match the platforms’ core product logic. Vertical, punchy, swipeable content doesn’t adapt well to a couch setting where hands are idle and attention is shared. Worse, most creators aren’t incentivized—or equipped—to build for this shift. They’re optimized for vertical virality, not horizontal storytelling. Without a clear monetization layer that rewards long-form content, creators have little reason to change.

Even the UX fails to translate. Swipe gestures and thumb-speed pacing don’t make sense on a remote control. Unless these platforms reimagine navigation, discoverability, and user intent around TV contexts, they risk launching apps that gather dust.

The biggest blind spot in Meta’s and ByteDance’s TV ambitions is misunderstanding why YouTube wins. It’s not just about being first. It’s about building an ecosystem where every stakeholder—creator, advertiser, viewer—has aligned incentives to stay, watch longer, and reinvest in the format.

  • Creators earn more per minute watched and have tools for deeper engagement.
  • Advertisers understand the format logic and can run effective brand campaigns.
  • Viewers expect a mix of entertainment and utility—documentaries, tutorials, talk shows—that match TV consumption habits.

By contrast, TikTok’s monetization tools are still rudimentary, with many creators relying on brand deals or off-platform income. Instagram’s Reels monetization lags behind even TikTok’s. Moving to TV without fixing these gaps is like launching a restaurant in a new city without a supply chain or trained staff.

It’s possible TikTok and Instagram don’t expect their TV apps to dethrone YouTube. Instead, this may be a defensive maneuver—designed to secure a presence, capture marginal engagement time, and test higher-value ad inventory formats. In that light, these TV apps function more like insurance policies than growth engines.

Still, even as experiments, their limitations matter. They reveal how much Meta and ByteDance remain mobile-reliant, lacking the cross-format resilience that YouTube has built. In a media landscape where every screen matters, failing to adapt content strategy to TV’s slower, deeper rhythms is a missed opportunity.

This is more than a format war. It’s a signal about platform maturity and the limits of scale-first thinking. YouTube’s advantage is systemic. Its lead on TV isn’t just a product feature—it’s a sign that its entire platform, from monetization to creator behavior to viewer expectation, has matured into multi-format readiness. TikTok and Instagram still play a game of surface-level feature replication.

TV isn’t the battleground that determines platform dominance. But it is the mirror that reveals who’s really built for retention, relevance, and revenue at scale. And right now, YouTube’s reflection is far clearer.

What’s more telling is how each platform approaches the interplay between user behavior and content economics. YouTube builds for participation: longer videos, active subscriptions, tiered monetization paths. TikTok and Instagram still optimize for micro-engagement and reactive consumption, making TV apps feel like UX extensions—not ecosystem shifts.

And in an era where creators are increasingly business-savvy and advertisers demand contextual ROI, the platform that owns creator loyalty and viewing context will outlast trend-driven popularity. Simply put: you don’t win TV by being viral. You win by being valuable—across formats, audiences, and attention spans. TikTok and Instagram aren’t there yet. And their TV push, however bold, exposes that gap more than it closes it.


Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 8:00:00 PM

Qantas tightens enforcement on unauthorized buying and selling of frequent flyer points

Qantas has issued a clear warning to its members: illegal buying and selling of frequent flyer points won’t be tolerated. Amid growing concern...

Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 8:00:00 PM

Singapore Airlines lie-flat business class now on every route

In global aviation, consistency is rare. Premium experiences are often limited to marquee routes and aircraft, while regional legs serve as placeholders—functional but...

Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 8:00:00 PM

CDL to offload US$2.1B Singapore office asset in move to reduce debt

City Developments Ltd (CDL)’s sale of its 50.1% stake in Singapore’s South Beach development to IOI Properties signals more than a high-profile divestment....

World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

Xiaomi electric SUV preorders signal a deeper China tech shift

The 289,000 preorders Xiaomi logged for its SU7 electric vehicle in a single hour didn’t just stun the automotive industry. They marked a...

World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

Why Trump’s policies don’t need to work—they just need to be heard

In modern American politics, winning the argument often matters more than winning the vote. Donald Trump understands this better than most. Since his...

World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

US-China agreement aims to accelerate rare earth shipments from Beijing

The United States’ agreement with China to expedite rare earth exports is not simply a trade facilitation mechanism—it is a pragmatic recognition of...

Middle East
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

Egypt bets on China’s development model—and leaves the West behind

Egypt is no longer hedging its bets. With a flurry of state-to-state agreements and high-level partnerships, Cairo has effectively repositioned itself under China’s...

United States
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 5:30:00 PM

Republican megabill sharpens fiscal penalties for immigrant families

The Republican-backed immigration and tax legislation now moving through Congress is more than a budgetary maneuver. While framed as part of a broader...

United States
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

Trump’s 2025 tax plan changes the rules for donating to charity

In 2025, a new tax megabill championed by former President Donald Trump is reshaping the financial calculus behind charitable giving in America. While...

Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 2:00:00 PM

Offline spending still leads in GE2025 campaign

Singapore’s 2025 General Election saw candidates spend $13 million to win votes. Nearly half of that went to old-school, offline formats—posters, banners, stage...

World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 2:00:00 PM

Are today’s ‘like-minded countries’ more strategically than ideologically aligned?

In international politics, language does more than describe the world—it shapes it. For years, the phrase “like-minded countries” served as diplomatic shorthand for...

World
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 27, 2025 at 2:00:00 PM

Starbucks turns to local partners as beverage wars escalate

For decades, Starbucks enjoyed uncontested dominance as Asia’s symbol of modern café culture. From Shanghai to Jakarta, its green-and-white logo became shorthand for...

Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
Load More
Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege