YouTube’s new creator-brand matchmaking efforts

YouTube’s latest move lets creators in the YouTube Partner Program voluntarily become an open book for potential brand partners. Think of it as LinkedIn for influencers, but with more subscriber counts and fewer “blessed to announce” humble brags.
Here’s what creators can now share with brands: Subscriber counts, the holy trinity of engagement (views, likes, and comments), audience demographics, and shopping tag performance (proof that your content can make people spend money).
YouTube explains this will “streamline data sharing across Google’s tools,” which is corporate speak for “we’re making it easier for everyone to make money together.”
And honestly? We’re here for it.
Previously, the vetting process often involved lengthy back-and-forth communications, with creators sharing screenshots or reports manually. Now, interested brands can access verified data directly through YouTube’s systems.
In other news, YouTube is tightening the screws on repetitive, mass-produced content, which YouTube politely calls “inauthentic.” This isn’t exactly a new policy though, as YouTube has always required “original” and “authentic” content for monetization. But now they’re getting better at detecting when someone’s just feeding prompts to ChatGPT and calling it a day.
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