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Making money on TikTok isn't as straightforward as on other platforms, so influencers are getting creative

'Virality Clause'

Making money on TikTok isn't as straightforward as on other platforms, so influencers are getting creative

Audio Sponsorships

Audio Sponsorships

Some creators looking to make TikTok lucrative have been doing brand sponsorships on other platforms for years, but others, like 19-year-old Skylar Krupa and his 87-year-old grandmother Jenny Krupa, are brand new to the world of monetizing social media.

Skylar runs the account, with videos starring his grandmother and occasionally his grandfather. The account went viral almost by accident, when Krupa publicly posted a video titled "Perks of being old" that was meant to be only for family. It reached over 1,000 views in 15 minutes, and took off from there, proving Bernath's point about any video having the potential to go viral, even without a huge following.

The Krupas mostly make videos for fun, but they have made money off a few posts. Their approach takes advantage of the audio-based nature of TikTok. Audio can be as important as video clips on TikTok, and the app makes it easy for users to use audio posted by someone else. Songs and remixes go viral on the app, and users can easily repurpose audio and apply them to their own videos. These trends have helped launch songs like Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road" from TikTok popularity to the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100, and some artists have begun paying big accounts to use their songs in the hopes of achieving Lil Nas X levels of success.

Skylar came up with a pretty straightforward formula for his grandmother's rate: $25 per 25,000 followers. He told Business Insider that they have to say no to requests often, and he only accepts a song when he can think of a funny idea to accompany it. One song was from artist 24KGoldn, who has already seen success on the app. Aviva Sofia, a star with a large TikTok following, told Paper "The entire reason all this started was from the song "Valentino" by 24KGoldn. I made his song a HUGE trend on the app and ended up collaborating with him and getting to meet him, which was absolutely insane."

According to Skylar, users should be able to tell if a video has sponsored audio like the ones he used. TikTok lets users select audio on a post and go to a page that collects all the posts that have used the same audio. He said that if only a few people have used a song, but they all have a large following, there's a good chance that it was sponsored. Though he did not suggest anything explicitly showing that the audio was sponsored.

The future of making money on TikTok

The future of making money on TikTok

Both Bernath and Krupa have big plans for their futures on TikTok.

Krupa wants to keep making videos with his grandmother, and the plan is to get to the point where she's an influencer and they're consistently making money off the account. Now that the account has nearly 473,000 followers, they should be making around $470 per sponsored post, based on the rate Krupa worked out.

For Bernath, TikTok became his account with the biggest following just this week. For now, it's the platform he's most excited about, and where he sees the most potential growth, although he hasn't yet created a sponsored post.


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