Language: EN | ES

How Linktree vp Lara Cohen is championing for creators to get a bigger piece of the pie

This article is also available in Spanish. Please use the toggle above the headline to switch languages. Visit digiday.com/es to read more content in Spanish.

Subscribe: Apple PodcastsStitcherSpotify

The creator economy is bursting at the seams as brands tap into social media stars, both big and small, hoping to recreate word of mouth-style marketing online.

In fact, agency clients and brands invested more in influencer marketing in 2023 than they did in 2022, according to Digiday+ research. In Q1 of 2022, 69% of agency professionals said their clients spent at least a very small portion of their marketing budgets on influencers. By Q1 of 2023, that figure jumped to 76%. Goldman Sachs predicts that the creator economy could approach half of a trillion dollars by 2027.

As more money flows into the creator economy, creators are looking for two things: their fair share of that money and more sovereignty over their online presences. And Linktree, a link-in-bio tool, is positioning itself to be an intermediary, facilitating the growth, per Lara Cohen, vp of partners and business development at Linktree.

“There’s a shift happening right now and I think the financial shift has really yet to catch up directionally [with] where the market is right now, in some ways,” Cohen said on the most recent episode of the Digiday Podcast. “The real shift that we haven’t seen yet that we’re really advocating for on the front lines of Linktree is that these creators should be paid more.”

On this episode, we caught up with Cohen to talk about the growing creator economy, monetization at Linktree and what maturation looks like in this space.

Below are highlights from the conversation, which have been lightly edited and condensed for clarity. 

On adapting to the current creator landscape

Right now, these marketing budgets are the last things to change. It was the transitioning from moving dollars from class TV to digital, [which] was a shift. If a company allocates 3% of their marketing budget to influencer marketing, the trend that we’re going to see in the future is that these creators are really, if not getting rid of brick and mortar (I don’t think anyone wants to get rid of brick and mortar), but [are] much more on par with brick and mortar in terms of what they’re doing. It’s not just marketing, they’re really the delivery platform for how people buy and sell. We’re doing a lot of thinking about how we can bring commerce directly into Linktree and take out that extra step for folks so they’re more likely to convert directly on your Linktree. While really, at the same time, championing for creators to get a bigger piece of the pie because they’re doing a lot of work here — more than just a 3% affiliate rate. 

Linktree business opportunities in the creator space

Right now, we are a [software-as-a-service] product. Creators selling more and making more money on Linktree, the value back to us is that more people will use our pro tools and want to buy subscriptions because the analytics that they’re getting, these pro features that they’re getting are valuable to them because it helps them make smarter, more informed brand deals, and make them more valuable in the marketplace. We’re definitely thinking about, if we were to do direct sales on Linktree, what that would look like. Obviously, that model is that we take a cut of that as well. Because we would be entering the marketplace with the size and scale of 45 million creators, that sets us up in a different way where we have more leverage for the creators than any commerce marketplace that’s starting.

Sovereignty in the creator economy

Creators and these platforms have a classic frenemy relationship, where they are both reliant on each other, dependent on each other, but also really pivotal to each other’s success. But at the end of the day, there’s a power imbalance right now where the platforms are making a lot more money from the creators and the content that they bring to the platforms than the creators are making back, because they ultimately are running ads against this content and it’s what brings people to tune in to the platforms. I don’t think anyone, with the exception of maybe YouTube, has figured out a really scalable way to get creators of all size and scale paid that way.

https://digiday.com/?p=540384

More in Marketing

With the introduction of video ads and e-commerce, Roblox looks to attain platform status

Roblox is expanding into more areas than just ads in 2024. Much like platforms such as Amazon and Facebook have transcended their origins to evolve from their origins as online marketplaces and social media channels, Roblox is in the midst of a transformation into a platform for all elements of users’ virtual lives.

PepsiCo wants to remain a ‘driver of culture’ as it turns to influencers and activations amid rebrand

The soda-maker says it can translate cultural relevance into sales volume.

‘It hasn’t changed our plans’: Despite Google’s cookie setback, Vodafone presses forward in search for alternatives

Vodafone is working with Adform in its search for alternatives to third-party cookies.