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Friday, June 12, 2020

How Much Money A YouTube Star With 100,000 Subscribers Makes: Fitness Influencer

How Much Money A YouTube Star With 100,000 Subscribers Makes: Fitness Influencer

              
Joe Farrington, 18, lives within the UK and posts fitness videos to his YouTube channel "Joe Fazer" with 139,000 subscribers. 
Farrington told Business Insider that he treats YouTube like a full-time job and earns money through sponsorships and ads in his videos. 
YouTube creators like Farrington earn money off the platform through YouTube's Partner Program, which lets creators monetize their channels with video ads.
On average, Farrington's YouTube channel earns about $560 a month from the ads that play in his videos, he said. 
In response to the coronavirus, and taking college classes from home, he's thought about potentially taking a year off from University this fall to focus on his YouTube channel, he said. 
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How much money YouTube pays creators with 100,000 subscribers each month varies based on the video content and audience the channel attracts. 

Joe Farrington, 18, lives within the UK and posts fitness videos to his YouTube channel "Joe Fazer" with 139,000 subscribers. 
  
Farrington started his YouTube channel in 2012 and created multiple different channels throughout the years, he said. Today, he treats YouTube like a full-time job and earns money through sponsorships and ads in his videos, he told Business Insider.

"Before I started this channel I got into fitness," he said. "I posted my transformation – which a change will always get a good amount of views – and after I posted it, it went absolutely viral with 26 million views." 

Creators on YouTube earn a particular amount of cash for a video from Google's AdSense program supported their CPM rate, or cost per 1,000 video views. CPM rates vary between creators, and no creator consistently has an equivalent rate. CPM depends on a number of factors, from the place in the video where viewers normally drop off to the type of advertisers the video attracts. Many creators have ad-placement strategies for earning the most money possible.

Advertisers pay more for an informative business-related video than a vlog-style video. The rate also depends on seasonality, with lower CPM rates at the start of the year and higher ones toward the end.

Some videos that contain swearing or copyrighted music are often flagged by YouTube and demonetized, earning hardly any money for the creator (or none at all). One of YouTube's biggest stars, David Dobrik, recently said in an interview that he earned only around $2,000 a month from AdSense, despite weekly videos gaining a mean of 10 million views. He makes most of his money on custom merch, Dobrik told The Wall Street Journal in March.

After posting his "1 year body transformation" video 2 years ago, and seeing how well the video performed, Farrington decided to post more fitness-related content and continue sharing his journey with his growing audience. That video (with 26 million views) earned over $8,000 in AdSense, according to a screenshot viewed by Business Insider. 

"The viral video definitely helped," he said, adding that he gained around 60,000 subscribers from that one video. "But there is a difference between subscribers and subscribers who actually want to observe you. Some people find a video, subscribe, but then they don't watch the rest of your videos. Because I've been consistent I've gained more subscribers who actually watch my videos." 

Monthly, Farrington's YouTube channel earns about $560, according to a screenshot viewed by Business Insider. 
"I'd say it's about a 70/30 spilt," he said about his sponsorship revenue compared to his ad revenue. "Sponsorships 70, YouTube 30." 

Farrington has a long-term partnership with the popular UK protein powder company, My Protein, he said. He earns revenue when his followers use his discount code. 

Many influencers are getting smart about finding ways to diversify – especially in recent weeks with the ad business hurting for influencers due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Recently, YouTube creators experienced a decline in direct-ad-revenue rates from the platform in April, likely because of shifting ad budgets.

Some creators have larger business ventures outside of ad-supported revenue models, like YouTube creator Preston Arsement who is also the CEO of the digital-media studio TBNR, which Forbes estimated earned $14 million before taxes from June 2018 to June 2019. Others sell consumer products like makeup, merchandise, or books that have the potential to become New York Times bestsellers.

These types of revenue streams are more important than ever for influencers, as brand deals and AdSense revenue fall dramatically. 

"I'm getting double the amount of views now, but half the revenue," Farrington said about his YouTube channel in recent weeks. 

In response to the coronavirus, and taking college classes from home, Farrington said he's thought about potentially taking a year off from University this fall to focus on growing his YouTube channel.

"I'm debating whether I should take a year out and specialise in YouTube," he said. "And if that does not computethen subsequent year i will be able to return to college and do YouTube on the side." 

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