In my last column, I suggested that formats are evolving into operating systems for IP - not merely production templates, but structures that allow stories, talent and audiences to move, adapt and scale across platforms. The natural continuation of that argument is economic. If IP now travels across broadcast, streaming, FAST, YouTube, social platforms and TV operating systems, what happens to value as it moves? The industry still treats this as an attribution problem, which surfaces delivered the impression, which platform captured the revenue, while largely ignoring the IP that generates the attention in the first place. If content now flows across platforms and formats while remaining recognisable to audiences, then value generated also flows and compounds. IP no longer moves in a straight line. It begins in long-form, reappears in clips, intensifies through commentary, converts into search, sustains fandom and reshapes commercial leverage across the system. When IP moves, does each movement monetise value once or does it increase the value of the next monetisation event? And are all monetisation events actually equal? Some uses of IP generate revenue now but weaken its future value. Others produce modest returns but materially strengthen the next deal, the next window, the next negotiation. And some uses, often under-recognised, compound value across the system so that each exposure makes the next one more valuable. The commercial question is no longer whether a surface makes money. It is whether each movement of IP makes the next one more valuable. And the real task is not just to monetise IP, but to structure its movement so that value accumulates before it converts. Does it generate value inside FAST and stop there? Does it create revenue on YouTube while testing a storyline for a future premium tentpole? Or does it compound value across FAST, YouTube, vertical video, microdrama, community, and future IP extensions? This is the difference between extractive, transitional and compounding value. Extractive value is the most visible and often the most misleading. It is what happens when IP generates revenue in the moment but leaves the underlying asset no stronger. Inventory is sold cheaply. Catalogue is distributed widely without access to data or audience relationships. Content appears in environments that generate viewing but no repeat behaviour, no pricing power, and no useful signal for the owner. Like, using YouTube as a dumping-ground distribution pipe, without a clear licensing strategy, is not neutral. It is extractive. It trades short-term reach for long-term pricing power. Transitional value is less obvious but strategically more important. Here, immediate monetisation may be modest, but the use of IP creates a bridge to something more valuable. A YouTube presence may not rival premium video in direct revenue, but it can drive discovery, search, fandom and relevance with younger audiences. A social extension may not monetise meaningfully on its own, but it can build format recognition, talent visibility and sponsor confidence. A FAST channel may produce limited yield in isolation, but it can prove repeat behaviour and create evidence for more valuable packaging. In these cases, the first transaction is not the destination. It is where the operating system logic begins. Compounding value takes this one step further. Here, each use of IP increases the value of the next, and the system, not the individual surface, becomes the unit of value creation. A format no longer lives within a single window. It can generate broadcast viewing, social participation, YouTube discovery, FAST continuity, sponsorship appeal, talent equity, live extensions and licensing opportunities. Each layer reinforces the others. Each exposure strengthens the commercial position of the next. Broadcast creates cultural weight. Social creates participation. YouTube creates discovery. FAST creates a habit. Sponsorship creates commercial depth. Talent creates recognisability. Live creates scarcity. Licensing creates leverage. The value is not additive. It is multiplicative. And yet much of the industry continues to measure performance as if each surface operates in isolation - broadcast ratings, YouTube views, FAST hours, social engagement, sponsorship revenue, and of course, CPM. Each is assessed independently, rarely in terms of its contribution to the whole. That is increasingly insufficient. A FAST channel should not only be judged by its ad yield. It should be judged by whether it increases catalogue value, strengthens renewal negotiations, improves advertiser demand or provides evidence for further commercial packaging. A YouTube strategy should not only be judged by views. It should be judged by whether it drives discovery into owned environments, builds search demand, strengthens talent equity or increases the commercial appeal of the underlying IP. A TV operating system placement should not only be judged by reach. It should be judged by whether it returns visibility, data, conversion pathways and commercial leverage to the IP owner, or whether it primarily strengthens the UI’s advertising shelf. As IP becomes more fluid, the industry needs a more disciplined way to intentionally design and evaluate how value moves through the system, what is monetised immediately, what is held back, and what is amplified before conversion. In a fragmented media environment, value does not move evenly. Some flows strip it out. Some convert it once. Some build it into something larger. None of it should be left to serendipity. It should be designed. |