+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

TikTok music money, an influencer council, and how much YouTubers with 1 million subscribers earn

Jul 9, 2020, 18:29 IST
Business Insider
Surfaces duo Forrest Frank and Colin Padalecki.Stefan Kohli @photokohli/Surfaces

Hi, and welcome back to Influencer Dashboard. This is Amanda Perelli and I'll be briefing you on what's new in the influencer and creator economy.

Advertisement

TikTok has become a major force in the music industry and influencers are getting paid thousands of dollars to promote songs.

This week, my colleague Dan Whateley spoke with TikTok creators, talent managers, and music marketers to understand how much influencers can earn by promoting songs on the app.

The starting rate for a song integration is in the low hundreds of dollars but can go well above $5,000 for a single post, according to industry insiders.

"I have heard of song promotions anywhere between $250 to $1,000 for accounts at or below my size and engagement rate," TikTok creator Alex Stemplewski (8 million followers) said. "Obviously the Charlis and Addisons can earn significantly more."

Advertisement

For TikTok influencers, promoting songs can be a reliable (and quick) way to earn extra income from the app.

Ariell Nicholas Yahid, a talent manager at the TikTok-focused talent-management upstart the Fuel Injector, said his company facilitates four to five paid song integrations a week for the company's TikTok creators.

Read more about how TikTok has become a major promotional tool for the music industry, here.

You can read most of the articles here by subscribing to Business Insider. And if this is your first time reading Influencer Dashboard, subscribe to the newsletter here.

The founder of The American Influencer Council explains what industry changes she's pushing for

American Influencer Council founding membersAmerican Influencer Council

Advertisement

Influencers now have their own trade organization to lobby on their behalf and educate digital creators on the business: The American Influencer Council.

My colleague Sydney Bradley spoke with the founder of the AIC to learn more about what its early efforts and membership will look like.

The AIC plans to advocate on behalf of influencers for industry reform, such as lobbying the Federal Trade Commission for more transparency and clearer standards for sponsored content.

It wants more explicit and accessible guidelines for creators on how to disclose their paid or sponsored content, such as when and where to use the hashtags #AD or #SponsoredContent, and whether influencers should disclose gifts with #freeproduct when they endorse gifted products.

Read more on the organization and why sponsorship standardization is a top priority, here.

Advertisement

A veteran talent agent says TikTok is the next frontier for gamer houses and esports teams

Amber Howard (center) appears with gaming creators at TwitchCon.TalentX Gaming.

Last week, talent agent Amber Howard left A3 Artists Agency (formerly Abrams Artists Agency) to take on a new position as the new head of talent at TalentX Gaming, a joint venture between the esports company ReKTGlobal and the TikTok-focused talent-management company TalentX Entertainment.

Dan spoke with Howard on the move and her plan to recruit diverse gamers to the TalentX roster.

"We as talent managers need to go out and find and really look for those underrepresented talent," she said. "I think we all collectively have to do our parts to make sure that we are reaching out across the aisles and making sure that we are elevating other people in the space."

Howard is bringing an existing roster of diverse clients to TalentX Gaming, including P2istheName, Natalie "ZombiUnicorn" Casanova, Mari "AtomicMari" Takahashi, and Soleil "Ewok" Wheeler, a 14-year-old gamer who is deaf and plays "Fortnite" for the esports organization FaZe Clan.

Advertisement

Read more on why she's betting her career on TikTok talent, here.

How much money a YouTuber with 1 million subscribers earns

Shelby Church

Breaking the 1 million subscriber mark often means a YouTube creator is earning a comfortable full-time living from the platform.

YouTube creators who are part of the platform's Partner Program can monetize their videos starting at 1,000 subscribers (if they meet other requirements).

Over the past few months, I've spoken with dozens of YouTube creators about how much each of them earned from the platform. Five of the YouTube creators I spoke with had between 1 million and 2 million subscribers and they opened up about various financial topics.

Advertisement

Here's a sample of the insights they shared:

  • Kevin David (1 million subscribers) earned about $400,000 in Google AdSense in 2019.

  • Marina Mogilko (1.2 million subscribers on her lifestyle channel) said one of her videos with 1.5 million views had made $10,000 in AdSense revenue.

  • Shelby Church (1.5 million subscribers) earned $140,000 in 2019 from YouTube.

Read more on how much they earn, here.

What else happened on BI this week:

  • A new app lets YouTubers get paid early: Dan wrote that the influencer-tech company ChannelMeter is launching a cash payment app for YouTubers with the goal of eventually selling banking and other financial service products to creators.

Ask an influencer:

Submit your questions about the industry or for creators to aperelli@businessinsider.com. We'll answer your questions in an upcoming issue of Influencer Dashboard. Stay tuned!

Top 5 trending digital creators this week:

We used data collected from Famous Birthdays to track 5 trending web stars this week. Check them out:

  1. Saiko, YouTuber: He's a Brazilian gamer with 2.9 million subscribers.

  2. Mariamstar1, TikToker: She has 2.6 million followers and posts lip sync and comedy videos.

  3. Devin Caherly, TikToker: He has 2.4 million followers and is known for dueting videos with creator Tati.

  4. James Wright, TikToker: He is a member of the Hype House and has 2.2 million followers.

  5. Sydney Serena, YouTuber: She is a beauty and fashion creator with 2 million subscribers.

Industry updates:

Pocket.Watch

Advertisement

This week from Insider's digital culture team:

Here's what else we're reading:

Thanks for reading! Send me your tips, comments, or questions: aperelli@businessinsider.com.

Subscribe to the newsletter here.

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article