Content creators often think more about the future of your small business and not so much about your personal future.
But for long-term success, it’s critical to prep for your future self – and the future of your business and family. “We need to put away our nest egg for our future,” says Emily Boothroyd, a wealth manager and partner at Merit Financial Advisors.
These four steps can take your personal business to the next level.
Goal 1: Plan for retirement. Socking away even a little bit of cash now can make a difference in your future. Among the most popular options are IRA accounts in forms such as Simplified Employee Pension (SEP), Roth, and traditional. Or you can open a solo 401(k).
“Try to get to a point where at least 15% of your income is being put away for retirement in some fashion,” says Brandon Renfro, owner of Belonging Wealth Management. “Even if you have to start at something smaller, try to work up to a proper savings rate.”
Goal 2: Map your biggest dreams. Do you want to buy your own home? Pay for your kids’ college educations? Take an extended vacation to the south of France? Become an angel investor to startup companies?
Once you set aside money in an emergency fund and a smart retirement strategy underway, think about your other goals and dreams and how you’ll make them happen. A reputable financial adviser can help create a foundation for your financial planning based on your personal goals. Look for a professional who has worked with people like you – small business owners who have different revenue streams and fluctuating incomes.
Goal 3: Ensure you’re insured. Nobody wants to think about death or a serious injury that makes it impossible for you to continue working, but stuff happens. “If you’re young and you don’t have kids, you probably don’t need (life) insurance,” Emily says. “But if you’re a content creator, sole breadwinner, and you have three little kids, you should be thinking about life insurance.”
If you have a business partner, each of you should think about taking out a life insurance policy on the other. That way, if one of you dies, the remaining partner has money to hire someone to handle the deceased partner’s responsibilities.
Disability insurance can provide at least a portion of your income if you suffer from an illness or accident that makes it difficult for you to work. Businesses, including content creators, also might benefit from insurance, such as general liability, which covers claims that a business has damaged a person or property, and professional liability to protect you against claims of negligence.
Goal 4: Get your estate in order. A will, along with health care documents such as a living will, health care proxy, and health directives, all help ensure your wishes are followed in case of serious illness, injury, or death. A lawyer can help prepare these documents.
Is any of this fun? Nah. Not for most of us. But as your content business grows and matures, so should your personal finance game. As Emily says, “That’s part of coming into your own and saying, ‘Hey, I’m taking charge of my financial future.’”
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For five years, Melody Alisa’s YouTube was a hub for aspiring South Korean-based English-as-a-second-language teachers.
In 2020, her YouTube and Instagram changed to become a safe space to express her faith and connect with other Christians walking with God.
After sharing her beliefs with viewers, she rebranded social media to reflect her faith, later creating newsletters and public and private Facebook groups.
Why We’re a Stan:At the start of her YouTube career, Melody Alisa had an active travel and teaching page, posting images of her daily life in South Korea. But after connecting with her religious beliefs, Melody pivoted her content, too. The result is a thriving tilt centered on her faith.
“As creators are getting more attention (and $$$), they need to act like businesses which is something that they are not used to.” – Nikola Sokolov
things to know
Money
Podcasts get louder: Ad revenue from podcasts will exceed $2B this year, hit $3B in 2023, and $4B by 2024, according to a study from the Internet Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. (tubefilter) Tilt Take:That surprising explosive growth presents great potential for podcast creators who know how to attract and deliver for advertisers.
Gift me: YouTube is testing Membership Gifting. Interested creators can fill out this form. Gift memberships let the recipients access loyalty badges, custom emojis, and other perks. (9 to 5 Google) Tilt Take:Creators don’t get a take of membership gifts. If you want them on your channel, use them as a marketing tool, not a revenue source.
Audiences
Bye to ’Stack: The No. 2 paid newsletter in politics – the Dispatch – is taking its over 30K subscribers and leaving Substack. They say they’ve grown too big for the platform and want more control over ads and back-end flexibility. (Creator Economy Tips newsletter) Tilt Take:Watch how the Dispatch does in moving its audience to its new platform. It will help to see how a creator can move from rented land to their own property.
Learn this: Shopify introduced Audiences, a machine-learning feature that lets brands choose the products in their catalog to put in front of shoppers more likely to make a purchase. (Modern Retail) Tilt Take:E-commerce tools like Shopify are increasingly recognizing and using the power of their audience data. It’s a benefit to creators selling content products.
Tech and Tools
Pass on copypasta:Twitter’s updated copypasta and duplicate content policy means the visibility of repeated copy-and-pasted content may be limited, so they can’t artificially amplify content, manipulate Twitter Trends, results, or conversations. (Social Media Today; h/t Alicia Sowah) Tilt Take:Don’t simply paste the text from others’ tweets. Create original content with a similar message that will seem more personal to your audience.
Green glow: YouTube launched Green Screen. The tool lets users cut a segment (up to 60 seconds) from any eligible YouTube video or Shorts as the background for a new original Shorts. (Tech Crunch) Tilt Take:Don’t want users to use your content. Opt out in YouTube Creator Studio.
And Finally
Plagiarized mea culpa: Writer Jumi Bellow told her publishers at the last minute her expected debut novel included plagiarism. Then, they wrote an essay explaining why and plagiarized portions of that. (The New York Times) Tilt Take:Use plagiarism checker tools to confirm your content is original. It can be easy to pull portions from other content for your notes and forget to attribute them properly.
Glassdoor for influencers: A former successful TikToker left the platform to start Clara, a company she compares to Glassdoor for influencers and brands. Creators can review brands they worked with, how they were compensated, and how they were treated. (Marketing Brew) Tilt Take:Over 13K have signed up since January. It’s a great help to know the background on potential brand deals before you sign the dotted line.
Your team for this issue: Joe Pulizzi, Ann Gynn, Laura Kozak, Marc Maxhimer, and Dave Anthony, with an assist from Angelina Kaminski,Sarah Lindenfeld Hall, Shameya McCalman, and Don Borger.
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