What Is a Brand Deal? How Creator Sponsorships Work
A brand deal is a paid agreement where a creator promotes a company's product or service in their content in exchange for money, free product, or both. It's the most common way creators turn their audience into income.
You'll also hear it called a sponsorship, a partnership, or a collab. The core idea is the same: a brand pays for access to your audience and your credibility, and you deliver agreed content that features them.
How a brand deal works, step by step
- Outreach. Either the brand contacts you or you pitch them, usually with a media kit showing your stats.
- Scope. You agree on deliverables — for example, one Reel plus three stories, posted on a set date.
- Rate. You negotiate a fee based on your reach, engagement, exclusivity, and usage rights.
- Brief and approval. The brand shares talking points; you create the content; they review before posting.
- Publish and report. You post, then send performance results (views, engagement, clicks).
- Payment. You invoice, often net-15 or net-30, sometimes split before and after posting.
What you're actually negotiating
The fee is only one line. These factors move the number up or down:
- Deliverables — how many posts, which formats, which platforms.
- Exclusivity — agreeing not to promote competitors for a window costs the brand more.
- Usage rights — if they want to run your content as a paid ad, that's an extra license.
- Timeline — rush turnarounds command a premium.
- Whitelisting — letting the brand run ads from your handle is its own line item.
Worked example
A brand wants 1 Reel + 2 stories, 30-day competitor exclusivity, and the right to run the Reel as an ad for 60 days.
Base content fee: $1,200 Exclusivity (30 days): +$300 Ad usage rights (60 days): +$400 Total: $1,900
Same creator, same audience — but the add-ons nearly double the base fee.
This is why a flat "what's your rate?" answer rarely fits. Price the package, not just the post. To build a number you can defend, the brand deal rate calculator turns your reach, engagement, and deliverables into a quote in seconds.
How brand deals are usually priced
Two common models:
- Flat fee — a set price for the package. Predictable and common for smaller and mid-size creators.
- CPM-based — paid per 1,000 views the sponsored content earns. Rewards creators whose reach is reliable.
Many deals blend both: a guaranteed flat fee plus a bonus once views pass a threshold. Whatever the model, your engagement rate strongly influences your value — so know it before you negotiate, using the engagement rate calculator and our other free tools.
Common mistakes
- Quoting before you scope. Don't name a price until you know deliverables, exclusivity, and usage.
- Giving away ad rights for free. If they'll advertise your content, that's a paid license — bill for it.
- No contract. Always get scope, fee, timeline, and payment terms in writing.
- Underpricing to "get the deal." A cheap first deal sets a ceiling brands expect you to honor later.
FAQ
How much should I charge for a brand deal? It depends on reach, engagement, deliverables, exclusivity, and usage rights. Build a defensible number with the brand deal rate calculator rather than guessing.
Do brands pay in cash or free product? Both happen. Established creators charge cash; some early deals are gifted product. Free product is fine occasionally, but it doesn't pay your bills — value your time accordingly.
What's the difference between a brand deal and an affiliate deal? A brand deal pays a set fee for agreed content. An affiliate deal pays a commission on sales you drive. Many creators do both, sometimes in the same partnership.
Do I need a contract for a brand deal? Yes. A short agreement covering deliverables, fee, posting dates, usage rights, and payment terms protects both sides and prevents scope creep.