NAB
For every TikTok star raking in millions, there are
thousands of other creators who can barely make ends meet. There’s a solution
to that and it involves creators weaning off social media and establishing
their own leaner but higher value community of followers.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/how-creators-reset-their-social-strategies/
A new report analyzing the business model of 1,600 creators
advises them to invest time and effort building niche communities on a single
platform, where growth and profitability are less reliant on scale.
One of those platforms is the report’s sponsor, Mighty
Networks.
“What came through loud and clear is that creators are not
ever going to leave social media,” says Mighty Networks founder and CEO Gina
Bianchini. “This is not about ‘hashtag delete Facebook.’ We are talking about
people being much more mercenary about social media in pursuit of finding
meaning, and being much more of a missionary when it comes to their own
community and their own, direct model. They are putting ownership front and
center.”
The report suggests a manifesto of action for those looking
to get off the treadmill of mass daily social media posts for little reward.
It’s neatly outlined by Nicole Laporte, writing at Fast Company.
1. Own, Don’t Rent
Creators should wean themselves from reliance on Facebook
and Twitter and head to platforms like Kajabi, Substack and Gumroad, where they
can own their own content through subscriptions, memberships, and tips.
According to the report, 57% of creators see direct revenue through features
like subscriptions as more crucial to their future than social platform
revenue.
“In this model, Big Social serve as feeders and funnellers,
not feudal overlords,” says Bianchini.
2. Niche Not Broad
The report says that for a creator to earn $1,000 a month,
they need either 229 Substack subscribers, 224 Patreon supporters, 100,000
Instagram followers, or 2 million monthly YouTube views.
The reason? Smaller, more targeted audiences that are as
much about joining a community as following an individual are ultimately more
valuable to creators. That’s because creators are able to connect followers to
each other and unite them in a passionate cause, per se, as opposed to giving
them a place to simply ‘like’ or leave a comment about content.
3. Community Not Audience
New, independent creators are more interested in building
hubs where people gather and communicate as opposed to places where people drop
by to click a few thumbs-up buttons.
“Through memberships and subscriptions, creators can offer
their community members more — specifically more opportunities to engage and
more events to attend that are all aimed at bringing the group closer,” writes
LaPorte. “This means creators are less beholden to a model where they are
having to constantly entertain audiences with an endless stream of content.”
According to the report, while creators feel they have to
post five to seven times a day on Big Social platforms in order to generate
enough revenue to live on, one community platform generated $1,000 a month with
just two to three posts per week.
“The allure of platforms like Facebook and Instagram for
creators has been the instant ability to plug into those platforms’ networks,”
says LaPorte. “But the idea now is for creators to build up their own networks,
using their own tools.”
Again, the idea is not just to serve up content to an array
of social media sites, but to build a primary online hub that followers will
come back to again and again because of its community atmosphere. These
communities need not have massive social media followings. The report says that
on one platform that allows creators to build their own direct-to-consumer
following, the platform’s top 250 revenue-producing users had a median social
media following of just 8,500.
Bianchini reasons that once people make this calculation —
that “it’s easier to be successful with a smaller number of people” — the size
of the creator economy will balloon from its estimated size of 50 million
creators to several times that.
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