What YouTube pays for 1 million views, the business of Pinterest influencers, and TikTok's invite-on

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What YouTube pays for 1 million views, the business of Pinterest influencers, and TikTok's invite-only tool for marketers

What YouTube pays for 1 million views, the business of Pinterest influencers, and TikTok's invite-only tool for marketers


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Barbu shared that she has an average CPM rate of $10, which she earns per every 1,000 views on YouTube. Natalie Barbu



Hi, and welcome to this week's Influencer Dashboard newsletter!

This is Amanda Perelli, and I'll be briefing you on what's new in the business of influencers and creators.

This week I looked at how much YouTube pays creators on a single video with 100,000, 1 million, or 150 million views. The big takeaway: The rate that YouTube pays creators per view can vary wildly.

For instance, four creators I spoke with told me how much money they made from videos with more than 1 million views (and fewer than 1.5 million views) — and their answers ranged from $2,000 on the low end to a whopping $40,000 on the high end.

Why is that?

How much YouTube pays creators per 1,000 views (the CPM rate) varies depending on how long viewers watch for, the length of the video (and how many ads it contains), the viewer demographics, and other factors.

Some videos that contain swearing or copyrighted music are even flagged by YouTube and demonetized, earning hardly any money for the creator (or none at all). One of YouTube's biggest stars, David Dobrik, recently said in an interview that he earned about $2,000 a month from YouTube directly despite his weekly videos gaining an average 10 million views. He earns most of his money through brand sponsorships instead, like his partnership with SeatGeek.

Read my full post to learn how much YouTube paid some top creators for 100,000, 1 million, and 150 million views — and the strategies they employ to help boost earnings.

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

3 Pinterest influencers explain how much money they charge brands for sponsored pins and how the rates compare with Instagram

Influencer Keiko Lynn says her scarf tutorial is the most popular content she's pinned on Pinterest.
Pinterest is an afterthought to some in the influencer-marketing business, but popular creators are making thousands of dollars from it.

Dan Whateley, our new reporter on the business-of-influencers team, spoke with three Pinterest influencers about how they make money from the social platform.

One of the influencers, Erica Chan Coffman, who has 6.2 million followers, told Whateley that on average she charges brands between $500 and $1,500 for a sponsored pin.

That's a significant amount of money, but here's some context: She still makes more money from brands on Instagram, where she has only 120,000 followers.

Coffman said her Pinterest sponsorship price shifts based on what board she's posting on, the amount of graphics work required to create the pin, and whether it's long- or short-form content.

A YouTube creator with 1.4 million subscribers shares how much money she made in 2019 from ads

Shelby Church
How much money does a YouTube creator with 1 million subscribers make in a year?

Well, that depends on a variety of factors (remember the CPM rate from earlier?) and can be helped by certain techniques.

Shelby Church, a YouTube creator with 1.4 million subscribers, told me that in 2019 she earned more than double what she earned in 2018 from YouTube ads.

Church said she earned more primarily because of a certain strategy she began to use in mid-2019.

A top digital-talent exec at WME breaks down the big influencer deals of 2019 and what he's looking for in 2020, from TikTok to touring

Jad Dayeh/WME
Since the rise of digital media, Hollywood's top talent agencies have developed departments for influencers who are popular on platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and now TikTok.

I spoke with Jad Dayeh, a partner and the cohead of digital at William Morris Endeavor, who thinks the buzzy video app TikTok is "undeniably connecting with youth culture on a global level."

Dayeh broke down the big influencer deals of 2019 and shared what he's looking for in 2020.

Marketers share what it's like to use TikTok's invite-only tool for finding the right influencers to hire for brand deals

Presley Ann/Getty Images for TikTok
TikTok is looking to compete with platforms like YouTube and Instagram, which provide marketers and influencers more robust sets of tools to strike deals and build their businesses.

Whateley reported on TikTok's new influencer-marketing tool, which is designed to help brands find the right influencers to hire.

This tool, called Creator Marketplace, is in beta and available to only a few hundred users — but Whateley was able to get some marketers with access to the platform to break down how it works and share their experiences using it.

Send tips or feedback to me at aperelli@businessinsider.com.

Here's what else we're reading:


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YouTube pays for 1 million views, the business of Pinterest influencers, and TikTok's invite-only tool for marketers



 
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