Welcome to The Tilt, a twice-weekly newsletter for content entrepreneurs.
full tilt
What Six-Figure Content Creators Do
For content entrepreneurs like yourself, comparison doesn’t have to be the thief of joy.
Comparison can inspire and motivate you. It can confirm you’re on the right path. It can help you set ambitious but realistic goals for your content business.
So how does your content business compare to the 2,026 creators surveyed for the State of Creators ’24 Report by Kajabi, a creator commerce platform?
And if you want it to do better, what can you do that these six-figure entrepreneurs are doing?
Let’s dig in.
Like most small business owners, most creators never hit the $100K mark. But I’m sure a six-figure (or more) business is what most entrepreneurs want to build. This research focuses on the people who have done – and are doing – it successfully.
Unlike a lot of creator economy research focusing on creators who make their money through social media platforms, this study involves creators who have built their businesses primarily through their owned channels.
Finally, these creators tend to operate in fields requiring knowledge or expertise. The top content tilts for these creators fall into three categories: business and marketing, finance, and real estate.
In this group, 58% earn $100K to $499K, 27% earn $500K to $999K, and 17% bring in over $1M.
Eighty percent of these creators have at least a bachelor’s degree, and 86% work on the business full time.
Role of revenue streams
Revenue diversification makes a difference in earnings. Creators earning less than $100K have an average of two revenue streams. But creators earning between $100K and $150K operate five or six revenue streams. The top earners – over $150K – have seven revenue streams on average.
Among these creators’ revenue streams in order of popularity:
Digital products – courses, ebooks, templates
Platform payouts – views, streams, ad sense
Physical products
In-person consulting/coaching
Online consulting/coaching
But popularity isn’t the best reflection of a successful business. You could sell a product popular in the industry but net little revenue. So, what are the most profitable revenue streams? According to creators, these are the top four:
Online courses
Digital downloads
Subscriptions/memberships
Online coaching/consulting
Those results resonate with our earlier research. In The Tilt’s Content Entrepreneur Benchmark Report, the top five profitable revenue streams include consulting/coaching, books, online courses/workshops, advertising/sponsored content, and paid communities.
Creator entrepreneurs see the value in diversification in future business growth. In the Kajabi report, one-third of those surveyed say they plan to diversify their revenue streams in 2024.
Role of social media
Social media doesn’t go unnoticed by these creator entrepreneurs. Over 50% use the platforms to engage with an audience, but they don’t stay on the platform.
As The Tilt founder Joe Pulizzi says, “We see this kind of research over and over again. Simply put, you don't need a large audience to be successful as a content entrepreneur. Kevin Kelly was right. One thousand true fans, and you can create a content business model that works.”
These creators use social media to drive traffic to their owned channels, promote their products and services, and engage with their target audiences on social media.
The platforms to generate leads? Twenty-two percent say Instagram, 21% pick YouTube, and 19% reap rewards from TikTok.
When it comes to using social media as a community development tool, 22% of creators turn to YouTube, and 22% pick TikTok. Another 18% go on Facebook.
Improve your monetization strategy
Using Kajabi’s survey results along with The Tilt’s research on content entrepreneurs, how well does your business compare? When factoring in your unique circumstances, do you see any potential avenues to tap that could work well to grow your business?
If nothing or everything grabs your attention, consider this option: Add a revenue stream that does more with whatever is working well. Got a newsletter or podcast series? Package that content into an online course or take one and do a webinar. Got a video channel? Transcribe the content and create an ebook.
That’s the best part of being an entrepreneur – the choice is yours. Just let the comparisons help you make informed choices.
- Ann Gynn
Learn revenue opportunities and much more with experts at Content Entrepreneur Expo (May 5-7, 2024). Registration is now open!
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Win Big, Reward Your Team and Celebrate Your Clients
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Jessica created YouTube videos as she worked to make sense of her ADHD as an adult in hopes of helping other people learn, too.
Recognizing she wasn’t a science expert, she turned to those who were to help as she became an expert science communicator.
How To ADHD became a for-profit business when Jessica launched a Patreon platform because she couldn’t keep producing content and maintain her waitressing job.
Why We Stan: Though Jessica could have just shared her personal experience living with ADHD, she doesn’t. Her audience benefits from her factually based, scientific-backed approach.
Know a content creator who’s going full tilt? DM us. Or email tilt@thetilt.com.
things to know
Money
Bigger kick: Twitch rival Kick updated its Creator Incentive Program to give 95% of subscription earnings to the creators. [Tubefilter] Tilt Take:Nice bonus if you and your audience are already there, but it isn’t a good enough reason to move over to the platform.
Tech bucks: An analysis of US work-visa applications for creator companies found Discord pays $170K for a data scientist and Patreon coughs up $250K for a staff engineer. [Business Insider] Tilt Take:If you’re looking for a side hustle, think about the tech behind your content business. Work visas are usually only granted for jobs that don’t receive enough applications from skilled folks in the US.
Audiences
Lots of ears: YouTube hit 100M subscribers in 100 countries for its music and premium services. [YouTube] Tilt Take:That’s a lot of ears and eyes tuned into the platform.
Billions: Meta’s monthly users are up 6% year over year, hitting 3.98 billion across its family of apps at the end of 2023. [Variety] Tilt Take:Predictions of Facebook’s demise may be premature.
Tech and Tools
Uh-oh: A high severity vulnerability was found in Website Builder by SeedProd, a WordPress plugin. It exposes the sites to unauthorized modification of data. [Search Engine Journal] Tilt Take:If you use that web builder, click on the link for help. If you use other plugins for your website, create Google Alerts for each one. That way if a security risk or other problem is exposed, you’ll make sure to get the news.
Blue content: YouTube seems to be experimenting with organizing video feeds by color. Users can pick red, green, or blue. It seems YouTube classifies the video’s content based on the dominant hue in the thumbnail. [9to5Google] Tilt Take:OK, well that’s a new form of blue content.
And Finally
Secret identity: Substack author “Joe Friday” has attracted an audience while keeping his true identity hidden behind the fictional TV character. The content covers outrage, sarcasm, and charts, slides, graphics, data sets, and more to uncover stories that aren’t being told elsewhere. [Washington City Paper] Tilt Take:Though not big fans of anonymity, we are big fans of creators who operate as truth-seeking-and-sharing journalists.
Kids’ cuts: California’s state Senate passed a bill requiring creators who feature minors in at least 30% of their content to set aside a proportionate percentage of their earnings in a trust. [Politico] Tilt Take:Illinois already has a similar law. We hope all states take action to ensure children get their well-earned revenue.
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