Campaign WorkCreatorbeginner
Invite Types and Campaign Types
5 min read
3 steps
Updated May 2026Not every invite asks for the same kind of work. Some campaigns give you the media, some expect you to create it, and some require you to show up at a real location.
This guide helps you read the campaign type before you accept the invite.
1
Understand Broadcast Campaigns
Broadcast campaigns use media the brand has already prepared. Your job is to post that content according to the brief and the selected placement.
2
Understand Creator-Made UGC
UGC campaigns ask you to create original content from the brief. Review the instructions, required tags, placement, and references before you accept.
3
Understand Creators at Your Venue
Creators at Your Venue campaigns depend on a real visit. Confirm the location and practical requirements before accepting because the work depends on showing up and creating from that experience.
Best Practices
- Accept work you can actually deliver
- Check whether the brand provides content or expects you to create it
- Treat venue campaigns as practical commitments, not just content ideas
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Confusing Broadcast with creator-made UGC
- Accepting a venue campaign without checking location feasibility
- Missing the placement before planning the content
Frequently Asked Questions
Do all campaign types require original content?
No. Broadcast uses brand-provided content, while UGC and Creators at Your Venue ask for creator-made work.
creatorcampaign typesugcbroadcast