Heh, is Bangbus really a corporation? From the looks of it, it's more a partnership. Corporations can be a lot of work, and typically involve more than a handful of owners. I wonder what their stock symbol would be if they ever went public; "FUK", perhaps?
In any event, were you to release this kind of clip without an established reputation, I doubt you'd be doing as well as you currently are (or claim to be). The difference is between selling material to your target audience and selling a curiosity to those who may show a little interest but who are probably less interested in this than in their usual menagerie of outright fucking videos. Sure, you may attract a few new customers who wander in to check out this cute little oddity, but if you're not going to demonstrate your product to your target audience--that is, those truly interested in what you have to offer--then you're not going to be keeping the attention of that audience very long.
In other words, while this may be a good preview clip to show to outsiders and those unfamiliar with tickling as a fetish (though one would think most of them would figure it out by now, especially since tickling is so hardwired into human flirtation), it's certainly not going to convince anyone here to buy the clips. Are people supposed to just take your word about this girl's ticklishness, response, etc?
I'm not going to tell you how to run your business, but come on--this is Marketing and Economics 101, here. It's like if a movie company released a preview in which one of the actors talks about what it's like to make movies, and then shows maybe five seconds of footage from the film they're trying to get people to see, and then when criticized for it, they told people "well, we're going to show this preview to people unfamiliar with movies; screw you if you don't like it".