Facebook and Instagram to invest 13b in content creators
Facebook will spend $US1 billion ($1.3 billion) on social media creators through the end of 2022 in a fight for top talent announced in a week when TikTok became the first rival mobile app to hit 3 billion global downloads.
Facebookâs investments will include bonus programs to pay creators who hit certain milestones on its apps, including photo-sharing service Instagram, and fund users to produce content, the company said.
Multiple major tech platforms are on the offensive to attract and keep social media personalities with new payments and services.Credit:Tanya Lake
The social media giant is opening its wallet to woo creators with major fan followings from platforms like Alphabetâs YouTube and short video app TikTok.
âWe want to build the best platforms for millions of creators to make a living,â Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg said in a post.
âInvesting in creators isnât new for us, but Iâm excited to expand this work over time.â
Multiple major tech platforms are on the offensive to attract and keep social media personalities with new payments and services.
TikTok has committed to spending $US2 billion to support creators over three years. Snapâs Snapchat used to pay creators a total of $US1 million per day to post popular short-form videos on its service and says it still distributes millions per month to support creators through its Spotlight program.
âWith the 3 billion install milestone, TikTok is the fifth non-game app to join a tier thatâs historically been the exclusive domain of Facebook,â said mobile insights firm Sensor Tower in a report.
Facebook said its bonuses so far are by invitation only. On its main platform video creators and online gamers will receive a monthly bonus if they hit milestones like broadcasting a certain number of hours to earn Stars, a form of digital tipping that fans can use to pay their favourite creators during live-streamed videos.
Instagramâs bonus programs will include incentives to use Reels, its copycat TikTok feature that showcases short-form video clips. Creators will earn money based on how their Reels videos perform, the company said.
Reuters
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