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Jasmine Enberg Jasmine Enberg is an Influencer

VP & Principal Analyst, Social Media & Creator Economy. On-air TV expert & Bloomberg TV regular.

#VidCon hot take: The absence of brands was a red flag for the future of the conference and a missed opportunity for creators. ✨ The big theme on the industry track this year was the maturation of the creator economy and how creators can scale their operations. “It’s the end of the beginning,” said Tubefilter's Joshua Cohen. ✨ Words like “adulting,” “investment,” and “retirement” were common in conversations and on stage, where three creators who run 7-figure businesses referred to themselves as “CEOs” when asked by Jim Louderback what they consider to be their titles. ✨ Creators and executives stressed the importance of revenue and platform diversification, because of both the possibility of a #TikTok ban and to insulate creators from changes in platform algorithms and brand budgets. Yes, but: ✨ Brand deals remain the No.1 income source for creators. Without them, the conference was missing a key component of the creator ecosystem. EMARKETER expects sponsored content to account for 59.4% of the revenues creators generate from social media this year. ✨ Many #creators expressed frustration about the scarcity of “ad dollars” when talking about both paid ads and sponsored content, demonstrating a lack of understanding of how brands operate. Advertising and influencer marketing are increasingly merging through tactics like content boosting, but generally remain separate line items. By the numbers: ✨ Both #influencermarketing and ad dollars are flowing nicely into the creator economy. We expect US influencer marketing spending to rise by 16.0% to $8.14 billion this year. We also expect US social video ad spending to overtake linear TV ad spending in 2025. ✨ Some of the ad and brand deal drought is because of the sheer number of creators in the market. Nearly two-thirds (65%) of #GenZ now identify as creators, per YouTube’s latest Culture and Trends report, which means that competition for those dollars is fierce. The big picture: The creator economy has gotten so big and diverse that it’s hard to talk about it as a whole. Top creators now command communities and businesses that rival or surpass traditional brands, but the long tail of creators live in a very different reality. Many are struggling to monetize effectively, partly due to a lack of business acumen and a roadmap for success. More on this in tomorrow's Marketing and Advertising Briefing. Thank you to everyone who came to watch me, Kaya Yurieff and Megan Lightcap talk "Creator Economy Economics" on the main stage!

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Jasmine Enberg

VP & Principal Analyst, Social Media & Creator Economy. On-air TV expert & Bloomberg TV regular.

3d
Jasmine Enberg

VP & Principal Analyst, Social Media & Creator Economy. On-air TV expert & Bloomberg TV regular.

2d

This post has gotten more attention than expected! I want to clarify that I still got a lot out of VidCon, and that I loved celebrating how far the creator economy has come since the first event in 2010. It was great to mingle with creators and creator economy executives. I learned a lot from their side of the ecosystem. Thank you to Jacques Keyser and Lisa Milgram for inviting me to speak!

Robert Weissman

Exhibition Conference Events Senior Executive. Entrepreneurial Expertise in Development Management Sales M&A Education

3d

Tradeshows do not necessarily indicate the health of an industry, nor the intention and activities of suppliers or brands. Consider the case of Internet World. Started by Alan Meckler in a hotel ballroom in 1993, in a few years it grew to a roster of dozens of annual events internationally. It was sold to Penton in 1998 for 280 million $. The show subsequently disappeared in 3 years. However, in 'internet' did not disappear, nor did the brands, participants, or end-users. Rather than "missing" the opportunity of IW, they found other, and in their POV, more appropriate and beneficial opportunities. While not apples to apples, I believe there are lessons to be learned from that, and similar examples; eg: Comdex

Wendy Wildfeuer

Founder of Motom | Social Commerce Innovator | Business Growth | Ex-NBCU | Ex-Alloy

4d

As always, your take on things is so insightful. Disappointing to hear that there were a lack of brands at VidCon, although I'm not totally surprised given the bandwidth issues marketing teams are facing. Brand expectations for creator performance are increasing by the day (as it should). I see this first-hand with our clients - they are looking very closely at data, especially lower funnel. We always advise that best practice is to give it some time to truly evaluate a creator's potential value. They will not all be immediate performers and many are long-tail, which is why a scaled approach is important. Brand dollars will for sure dry up for creators who aren't willing to jump in head first on their own performance impact (affiliate affiliate affiliate!).

Finn McKenty 🍕

Helping entrepreneurs grow on LinkedIn & YouTube | Creator with 1.1 million followers | Want to grow your personal brand? Send me a DM 📩

3d

I feel like I’m the only creator who has Adsense as my biggest revenue source! It’s about 60% for me, and I see brand deals as the icing on the cake… I’m curious what that’s the case!

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Tiffany Kelly

Founder + CEO at Curastory ▶️ Forbes30u30 | ex-ESPN

4d

Yesss to their being so much creator supply. At Curastory, we calculate a creator video supply TAM at ~$650 billion, while for advertisers it’s a ~$280 billion video advertising demand TAM. Stark difference & equilibrium will only be met with demand growth that consistently is trending upward each year.

Sherman Chowrusmeekul

Financial Representative for eSports players and Content Creators

4d

Great read! One thing that stood out to me, is that creators are now thinking themselves as a business, hence referencing themselves as CEOs. This industry is something they can't take for granted; just like the NFL, a lot of money is made in a span of a few years! So them thinking about their financial future is the key for their greatness and future success!

Keith Bryan

CEO ⎮ Founder ⎮ President ⎮ SVP ⎮ Board Member ⎮ Media & Retail Media Exec ⎮ Created & Led Best Buy Ads to top 5 RMN globally

4d

Great post Jasmine Enberg! "Nearly two-thirds (65%) of #GenZ now identify as creators" ... uff da as they say in MN. The creator economy is real and brands who ignore it do so at their peril ... and on the flip side, aspiring creators need to dedicate themselves to developing serious business skills and acumen if they want to be in the small minority who can make a career of creating.

Jamie Gutfreund

Founder, Creator Vision: we help brands maximize their creator marketing investments: Chief Growth Officer/ Forbes 50 Entrepreneurial CMO/ PROUD AdCouncil Board Member/Campaign 40 over 40

4d

Thanks for sharing Jasmine Enberg. It’s important to understand the entire ecosystem and how the money works from brand to media agency to platform to creator agency to manager to creator. Looking forward to reading more and learning from your insights. 🙏🙏🙏

Brett Dashevsky

Head of Content Creators @ Kickstarter | Connecting the NYC creator economy | Innovating influencer marketing analytics

4d

Solid takeaways. Great to see you there

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