NovaFlow
24/7 Streaming
Case Study · Through May 2026
24/7 Streaming · Always-On Monetization

Three all-time revenue records in the first six months. Same catalog. Better engine.

In December 2025, NovaFlow launched a 24/7 stream for a top YouTube channel — and the channel posted its biggest revenue month ever. In April 2026, after upgrading the stream to broadcast-standard delivery and applying NovaFlow's recommended optimizations, the channel set a new all-time record. In May 2026, the system kept compounding — and the record was broken again.

Headline Impact · 5 months pre-launch vs. 6 months post-launch
+0%
Avg Channel Revenue
Channel revenue lifted +25% per month vs. the pre-launch baseline — and that's including the February break.
0×
Livestream RPM Lift
$12.70 at launch → $71.39 in May (Broadcast Standard + optimizations).
0
All-Time Records Set
December (launch), April (Broadcast Standard), and May 2026 each set new highs.
0×
Stream Revenue Lift
May stream revenue is 5.0× the launch month — same catalog, same audience.
Section 01 — Stream Performance

The 24/7 stream's first six months: a 5× revenue lift by month five, and accelerating.

NovaFlow's autonomous streaming platform launched the channel's 24/7 stream on December 1st, 2025. From day one, the stream contributed a meaningful new revenue line — and after the April upgrade to broadcast-standard delivery, it became one of the channel's most valuable monetization surfaces per view. May continued that trajectory, posting the highest single-month stream revenue to date.

Monthly stream revenue (Dec 2025 – May 2026) — indexed to launch month
Toggle between revenue (indexed to the launch month, Dec '25 = 100%) and RPM (actual dollar values). The April bar is when broadcast-standard delivery and recommended optimizations went live; May is the system continuing to compound — and a new all-time high.
Dec '25
Stream Launch
Jan '26
Full first month
Feb '26
Creator on break
Mar '26
Return to posting
Apr '26
Broadcast Std + Opt.
May '26
New all-time record
Section 02 — Broadcast-Standard Upgrade

April – May: same stream, materially better monetization.

In April, NovaFlow upgraded the stream from standard delivery to a broadcast-standard framework with proper ad-marker support — the same kind of infrastructure traditional TV networks use. Combined with NovaFlow-recommended scheduling and ad-density optimizations, the change unlocked a different tier of monetization on the same content library. May is the second month at the new tier — and it kept compounding.

Dec – Mar Standard delivery
Launch-grade streaming
1.0×
Avg monthly stream rev. (baseline)
$13.36
Avg stream RPM
935k
Avg stream views
~28 min
Avg view duration
Apr – May Broadcast Standard + Optimizations
Premium ad delivery, dynamically inserted
5.6×
Avg monthly stream rev. (vs. baseline)
$64.44
Avg stream RPM (4.8× prior avg)
1.07M
Avg stream views (+15% vs prior)
~48 min
Avg view duration (+72%)
Same catalog. Same audience.
No new shows. No new editing. No new investment from the creator. The April – May lift came entirely from how the stream is delivered to YouTube — broadcast-standard infrastructure paired with NovaFlow's data-driven scheduling and ad-pacing recommendations.
A different tier of monetization.
A $64+ stream RPM is dramatically above where the average YouTube channel monetizes — and meaningfully above where the channel's catalog uploads earn. The stream is now one of the channel's highest-yield surfaces per view.
Section 03 — Channel-Wide Lift

The whole channel grew. Including the uploads.

A common worry with launching a 24/7 stream is that it cannibalizes the main video catalog. The opposite happened. In the six months since launch, average monthly channel revenue is 25% higher than the five months before — and that figure includes February, when the creator was on break and posted nothing. Even uploads-only revenue (excluding the stream entirely) outpaced the pre-launch baseline.

Channel revenue — 13 months around the launch (pre-launch baseline = 100%)
Toggle between revenue and views. Dashed lines mark the December stream launch and the April Broadcast Standard upgrade. May set the new all-time record. The shaded band over February is the creator-break month — the dip is content absence, not stream performance.
No cannibalization — uploads-only revenue grew too
Pre-launch (Jul – Nov '25) baseline = 100%. Post-launch comparisons show: total channel revenue (+25%), channel revenue excluding the livestream entirely (+14%), and May's uploads-only figure (May livestream stripped out — still 22% above the pre-launch baseline).
Window CPM (indexed) Avg RPM ($) Monthly Revenue (indexed)
Pre-launch (Jul – Nov '25, baseline) 100 $22.81 100
Post-launch (Dec '25 – May '26 avg) +25% 94 $24.95 125
December '25 (launch month) Record 114 $27.80 139
April '26 (Broadcast Standard launched) Record 92 $26.74 141
May '26 (compounding) New Record 91 $28.46 148
Typical YouTube channel (creator-economy benchmark) ~46 ~$2 – $4

Note on April – May: the channel set new all-time revenue records in both months despite CPMs running 19 – 20% below December's holiday-quarter rate. The stream's stronger ad delivery and NovaFlow's optimizations more than offset the softer ad market — twice. (Pre-launch baseline = 100 for CPM and Revenue columns; higher = better. RPM column shows actual dollar values — the typical YouTube creator's RPM benchmark sits at ~$2 – $4.)

Section 04 — Why NovaFlow

A 24/7 stream is easy to start. Hard to keep getting better.

Most streams are static — a playlist set once and left running. NovaFlow treats the stream as a system that learns. Every day it gets a little smarter about what to play, when to play it, and where to place the ads — and the lift compounds. May beating April beating December isn't a coincidence. It's six months of small, data-driven decisions stacking up, then catching the lift from broadcast-standard delivery on top.

01
The schedule rebuilds itself daily
Every morning, NovaFlow scores each video on how well it actually held viewers — across every play it's had on the stream. Top performers earn more rotation. Pairings that lose viewers get separated. The same library that ran in December is running in May; what's changed is the order, the pacing, and the surrounding videos.
What it looks like in practice: videos are tiered (top 10% / strong / average / weak) and re-tiered as new data comes in. Trough hours are reserved for testing newer videos so the system can keep discovering what works without putting peak revenue at risk.
02
Ads run on data, not guesswork
NovaFlow tests four different ad break lengths in parallel and learns which ones hold the audience best on this specific stream. It also models when viewers peak each hour of day — so ad density scales with attention, heavier when the audience is large and engaged, lighter when it's not.
What it looks like in practice: ad break length and ad density change as the system gets more confident. Ad pacing in May doesn't look like ad pacing in December — and shouldn't, because the data underneath is different.
03
Broadcast-standard delivery
In April, NovaFlow upgraded the stream to the same kind of infrastructure traditional TV networks use — broadcast-grade delivery with proper ad markers. That lets YouTube treat the stream more like a TV channel and serve premium, dynamically-inserted ads instead of basic ones.
What it looks like in practice: NovaFlow handles the upgrade end-to-end. The creator account just needs YouTube DAI enabled (typically through the SPM). May's $71.39 stream RPM — versus $13.36 across the prior four months — is what that switch looks like in numbers.
04
A network of streams, learning from each other
This channel doesn't run alone. NovaFlow operates a portfolio of 24/7 streams across multiple verticals — and patterns we see on one stream improve the strategy on all of them.
What it looks like in practice: when we discover that a certain ad break length holds attention through a particular type of content, that signal propagates. The channel benefits from data a single creator-run stream would never see, and contributes its own signal back into the NovaFlow network.
Same catalog. Same audience. Different system underneath. 5.6× stream RPM in six months.
The channel set three all-time monthly revenue records in six months with NovaFlow — at launch, at the broadcast-standard upgrade, and again as the system kept compounding. The catalog didn't change. The engine did.