FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

Everything we get asked from creators evaluating representation and brands looking to work with our roster.

For CreatorsFor Brands25 questions answered
  • What Creator Management Is

    A creator management agency represents content creators in their commercial dealings. The agency sources brand partnerships, negotiates contracts, develops media kits, manages campaigns from kickoff through delivery, and advises on long-term revenue strategy. The goal is to handle the business side of being a creator so the creator can stay focused on making content. A good manager also functions as a market intelligence resource, knowing what brands in your category are paying, what deal structures are standard, and where the opportunities are before they become public.

  • An influencer marketing platform like Aspire or Grin is a tool brands use to discover and manage creators at scale. A creator management agency represents the creator, not the brand. The agency's job is to get the best possible deal for the creator: higher rates, better usage terms, longer exclusivity windows, and stronger contract protections. The interests are different. A platform serves whoever is paying for the platform. A management agency serves the creator on its roster.

  • Early-stage creators with occasional inbound deals often handle things themselves without losing much. The gap opens when deal volume increases, when you need to negotiate rather than just accept offers, or when you don't have enough market data to know whether what a brand is offering is fair. Most creators who start handling their own deals systematically undercharge because they have no benchmark for what brands actually pay. A 2025 study found creators with professional representation earn on average twice what unrepresented creators earn from brand work.

  • The creator economy refers to the ecosystem of independent content creators who build audiences and monetize them through brand partnerships, platform revenue, merchandise, courses, and other income streams. As of 2025 the global influencer marketing market is valued at approximately $33 billion and is growing. Approximately 127 million people worldwide are considered influencers or active creators, and brands spent over $7 billion on influencer marketing in the United States alone in 2025. The creator economy has shifted from a supplementary marketing channel to a primary one for most consumer brands.

  • On a typical day a creator manager is pitching brands from an active outreach list, responding to inbound brand briefs, reviewing and negotiating contract terms on active deals, coordinating deliverable timelines and approvals between creators and brand teams, tracking payments, updating media kits with fresh analytics, and scanning the competitive landscape for new brand opportunities in the creator's category. The majority of the work is commercial and operational, not creative. The manager's job is to keep the business side moving so the creator never has to think about it.

  • Working With Vessel

    Vessel maintains direct relationships with brand marketing teams across travel, lifestyle, and fitness verticals. We pitch creators on our roster into active campaigns, respond to inbound brand briefs, work with PR agencies and influencer marketing platforms including Aspire, Grin, and Upfluence, and build custom partnership proposals matched to each creator's audience and content style. Outreach is active and ongoing. We do not wait for inbound. Every creator on our roster has a dedicated brand outreach cadence running at all times.

  • Vessel takes a flat 20% commission on the gross value of brand deals we source and negotiate. There are no upfront fees, no monthly retainers, and no charges for services like media kit development or campaign management. We earn when you earn. If we do not close deals on your behalf, we do not get paid. This structure aligns our incentives entirely with yours.

  • We aim to source a creator's first matched brand opportunity within 30 to 60 days of joining, depending on niche, season, and active brand campaign calendars. Onboarding includes media kit development and outreach to our active brand network, which begins the same week you sign. We set realistic expectations at signing and give every creator a clear roadmap of which brands we are targeting and on what timeline. We do not guarantee deals but we do guarantee active, documented outreach.

  • Vessel does not have a strict follower minimum. We evaluate creators on the quality of their content, the strength of their audience engagement, and how clearly their niche is defined. We work with creators across a wide range of audience sizes including micro-influencers with highly engaged niche audiences. A creator with 40,000 highly engaged travel followers who convert on recommendations is more valuable to the right hotel brand than a creator with 400,000 disengaged lifestyle followers. What matters is that your audience shows up for the work you make.

  • When a brand makes an offer we review the full contract before the creator sees it. We evaluate the rate against current market benchmarks for the creator's audience size and niche, review usage rights and exclusivity windows, check payment terms and kill fee provisions, and flag anything that limits the creator's future earning potential. We then negotiate on the creator's behalf. Most creators who come to us from handling their own deals find that rates increase significantly once professional negotiation is in place, not because the brands were hiding money, but because most creators do not know what to ask for.

  • Yes. We work with creators at all stages including those who have been doing their own deals for years. In those cases we typically start by auditing your current deal history to establish rate benchmarks, reviewing any active contracts for renewal opportunities, and identifying gaps in your brand network. Existing relationships you have built yourself are yours. We do not take commission on deals you source independently.

  • No commission is owed on deals that do not close. If a brand pulls out of a negotiation, pauses their campaign budget, or the deal falls through for any reason before a signed contract, Vessel receives no payment. Commission applies only to fully executed deals with a signed contract and confirmed payment terms.

  • Travel, Lifestyle & Fitness

    Vessel works with creators producing original travel content across long-form video, short-form social, photography, and written formats. We represent destination-focused creators, boutique hotel reviewers, adventure and outdoor travel creators, travel family accounts, and documentary-style travel series producers. The common thread is an audience that is in a decision mindset, people who use content to plan where they go and what they book. That audience behavior is what makes travel creators commercially valuable to hotels, tourism boards, airlines, and tour operators.

  • Lifestyle is the broadest and most commercially active creator category. Brand deals for lifestyle creators span beauty and personal care, home goods and interior brands, wellness and supplements, fashion and apparel, food and beverage, financial services, and consumer technology. Deal structures vary from single sponsored posts to multi-month brand ambassador programs. The most valuable lifestyle creators have a clearly defined aesthetic and audience demographic that makes them easy for a brand marketing team to pitch internally. Vessel focuses on building toward sustained partnerships rather than one-off activations.

  • Fitness creators reach one of the most commercially responsive audiences in creator marketing. Sports and fitness content on Instagram has consistently shown the highest engagement rates of any content category on the platform. The fitness audience skews toward a 27-year median age, overlapping precisely with the 18 to 34 demographic that supplement, apparel, equipment, and performance technology brands prioritize. Fitness creators also produce content that translates directly to product demonstration, making them efficient partners for brands that need to show how a product works rather than just associate it with a lifestyle.

  • Hotel partnerships typically involve a hosted stay in exchange for a defined set of deliverables, a combination of Instagram posts, Reels, Stories, and sometimes YouTube or blog content. The deal is structured around a rate card that covers the creator's time and production, with the hosted accommodation as an additional component. Tourism board deals are usually larger retainer arrangements tied to a destination campaign, often spanning multiple trips and a seasonal content calendar. Airline deals range from single campaign activations to ongoing ambassador programs. All of these deal types have standard contract terms around exclusivity, usage rights, and approval processes that Vessel negotiates on the creator's behalf.

  • Rates vary significantly based on audience size, platform, engagement rate, deliverable scope, and exclusivity requirements. As a general benchmark in 2025: a fitness creator with 100,000 engaged followers on Instagram can expect $1,500 to $4,000 per sponsored post for a one-off activation. A three to six month ambassador program with a supplement or apparel brand for the same creator would typically be structured in the $18,000 to $45,000 range for the full term. Creators who bundle multiple deliverables, posts, Reels, Stories, and usage rights, earn on average 37% more than those who price by the individual post. These are market benchmarks, not guarantees.

  • Working With Vessel as a Brand

    Send us a one-page brief or a calendar invite. The brief should cover your campaign goals, the creator vertical you are targeting, your timeline, and your budget range. Within 48 hours we return three to five matched creators from our roster with rates, audience data, and availability. You review, select, and we handle the rest. One contract with Vessel, one point of contact for the campaign, and a verified post-campaign report.

  • Yes. We work with brands across the full spectrum from first-time creator campaigns to brands with established influencer programs looking for better roster management. For brands new to creator marketing we provide additional context on what to expect, how to brief a creator effectively, and what metrics to use to evaluate success. We also advise on deal structure, whether a one-creator test, a multi-creator series, or a sustained ambassador program is the right starting point for your goals.

  • There is no formal minimum. Campaign scope and investment are confirmed in a custom proposal based on your brief. Smaller single-creator activations (Spark tier) are available for brands that want to test a creator relationship before committing to a larger program. Most brand relationships that start with a single activation convert to ongoing programs within two to three campaigns once performance data is established.

  • Every creator on the Vessel roster is evaluated before signing for audience quality, content consistency, engagement authenticity, and niche definition. When we receive a brand brief we match against specific criteria including audience demographic overlap, past brand work history, content aesthetic, and exclusivity status. We do not pitch creators speculatively or blast briefs to the full roster. Every creator presented to a brand is a considered match, not a volume play.

  • Contracts, Payments & Logistics

    Content ownership is negotiated in every contract. The standard starting position is that the creator retains ownership of the content with a defined usage license granted to the brand, typically 90 days of organic usage rights across the brand's own channels. Extended usage, paid amplification rights, and whitelisting require separate negotiation and additional compensation. Perpetual buyouts of content are rare and significantly more expensive. Vessel negotiates these terms on the creator's behalf and flags any language that grants broader rights than the deal value justifies.

  • Payment terms are specified in every contract. Standard terms in the industry are 50% on contract signing and 50% on content delivery, or net 30 after content goes live. Vessel reviews payment terms in every contract before signing and flags any terms outside the standard range. Once a deal is closed and deliverables are completed, Vessel invoices the brand on the creator's behalf, receives payment, deducts the 20% commission, and remits the balance to the creator within five business days of receiving cleared funds.

  • An exclusivity clause restricts a creator from working with competing brands in a defined category for a defined period. For example, a supplement brand might request that the creator not work with any other supplement brand for 90 days before and after the campaign. Exclusivity has real commercial cost, it limits the creator's earning potential during that window, and should be priced accordingly. Vessel evaluates every exclusivity request against the deal value and the creator's existing brand relationships, negotiates the scope and duration to the minimum necessary for the brand's legitimate competitive concerns, and ensures the creator is compensated appropriately for any meaningful restriction.

  • Vessel's standard management agreements include a term length and a sunset clause. The sunset clause specifies that Vessel continues to receive commission on deals that were sourced and signed during the contract term for the duration of those deal agreements, even after the management relationship ends. This is standard practice in talent management and protects both parties. Deals that were in active negotiation at the time of contract end are handled on a case-by-case basis as specified in the agreement. We aim to make the end of a management relationship as straightforward as the beginning.

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