How to Price and Fund a Creator Campaign
Start with the Campaign Setup
In distributeme, pricing starts with campaign configuration. The setup step asks for campaign name, content responsibility, target reach, creator distribution strategy, placement, platform, instructions, and optional package or creative-reference details. Those choices shape the economics of the campaign before the funding screen even appears.
Example
A UGC Reel campaign with broad distribution behaves differently from a brand-provided content campaign, because the creator's job and the campaign structure are different from the start.
Use Creator Selection to Understand the Spend
Campaign spend is tied to the roster you actually build, not just the brief you wrote. Because creator selection happens before funding, the mix you choose affects expected reach and what you are ultimately paying to activate.
Review the Funding Summary Before Activation
The funding step shows total cost, estimated reach, creator count, and in some cases applied credits or tax breakdowns. This is the main pricing checkpoint in distributeme. It is where a brand decides whether the campaign economics are acceptable before committing money.
Treat the funding summary as the point where you sanity-check campaign scope against actual cost.
Separate Platform Cost from Brand Logistics
Campaign funding does not turn brand-side logistics into a managed service. If creators need products, shipping, food, venue access, or other support, those costs still sit with the brand and should be treated separately from the campaign funding summary.
Example
A campaign may look affordable in the funding screen and still become expensive if the brand has ignored courier, hospitality, or venue-readiness costs outside the platform.
Use Completed Campaigns to Judge Future Spend
Once funded, the campaign resolves into a live campaign with posts, reporting, and payout flow. That is how brands should learn whether a given level of spend makes sense. The better follow-up question is not just 'what did creators cost' but 'what did this funded campaign actually deliver?'
- Treat campaign setup choices as pricing inputs, not just creative inputs
- Review creator selection and funding together, not as separate decisions
- Use the funding step to pressure-test cost against expected reach and creator count
- Budget separately for platform activation and brand-side logistics
- Use completed campaign outcomes to calibrate future spend
- Reading the workflow as if distributeme were a manual rate-negotiation marketplace
- Ignoring how campaign type and creator mix change the funding outcome
- Forgetting costs that sit outside the platform funding step
- Funding a campaign before checking whether the creator roster actually makes sense
- Judging pricing without looking at what previous funded campaigns delivered
Frequently Asked Questions
distributeme is centered on campaign pricing, creator selection, funding, and payout flow. If you are evaluating spend, the most useful surfaces are the campaign setup, creator discovery, and funding summary.
It shows the campaign cost, estimated reach, creator count, and depending on the setup may also show credits or tax breakdowns before payment.
Brands should also evaluate campaign fit, creator roster quality, and any off-platform operational costs like shipping, product support, or venue readiness. A campaign can be fundable in-app and still be poorly scoped in the real world.