Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Making Media: Production, Practices, and Professions
- Production
- Research
- 2 Media Industries: A Decade in Review
- 3 Media Production Research and the Challenge of Normativity
- 4 Access and Mistrust in Media Industries Research
- 5 Cultural and Creative Industries and the Political Economy of Communication
- 6 The Platformization of Making Media
- Economics and Management
- 7 The Disappearing Product and the New Intermediaries
- 8 Value Production in Media Industries and Everyday Life
- 9 Transformation and Innovation of Media Business Models
- 10 Shifts in Consumer Engagement and Media Business Models
- 11 Media Industries’ Management Characteristics and Challenges in a Converging Digital World
- Policy
- 12 Global Media Industries and Media Policy
- 13 Media Concentration in the Age of the Internet and Mobile Phones
- Practices
- Innovation
- 14 Making (Sense of) Media Innovations
- 15 Start-up Ecosystems Between Affordance Networks, Symbolic Form, and Cultural Practice
- Work Conditions
- 16 Precarity in Media Work
- 17 Making It in a Freelance World
- 18 Diversity and Opportunity in the Media Industries
- 19 Labour and the Next Internet
- Affective Labour
- 20 Affective Labour and Media Work
- 21 Affective Qualities of Creative Labour
- 22 A Business of One or Nurturing the Craft: Who are You?
- Professions
- Music
- 23 Music in Times of Streaming: Transformation and Debate
- 24 Popular Music, Streaming, and Promotional Media: Enduring and Emerging Industrial Logics
- Television
- 25 Show Me the Money: How Revenue Strategies Change the Creative Possibilities of Internet-Distributed Television
- 26 Flexibility, Innovation, and Precarity in the Television Industry
- Social Media
- 27 Creator Management in the Social Media Entertainment Industry
- 28 #Dreamjob: The Promises and Perils of a Creative Career in Social Media
- Public Relations and Advertising
- 29 Redefining Advertising in a Changing Media Landscape
- 30 Perceptions and Realities of the Integration of Advertising and Public Relations
- Digital Games
- 31 Game Production Logics at Work: Convergence and Divergence
- 32 Reflections on the Shifts and Swerves of the Global Games Industry
- Journalism
- 33 ‘It Never Stops’: The Implicit Norm of Working Long Hours in Entrepreneurial Journalism
- 34 Transmedia Production: Key Steps in Creating a Storyworld
- Conclusion
- 35 Making Media: Observations and Futures
- Author Biographies
27 - Creator Management in the Social Media Entertainment Industry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Making Media: Production, Practices, and Professions
- Production
- Research
- 2 Media Industries: A Decade in Review
- 3 Media Production Research and the Challenge of Normativity
- 4 Access and Mistrust in Media Industries Research
- 5 Cultural and Creative Industries and the Political Economy of Communication
- 6 The Platformization of Making Media
- Economics and Management
- 7 The Disappearing Product and the New Intermediaries
- 8 Value Production in Media Industries and Everyday Life
- 9 Transformation and Innovation of Media Business Models
- 10 Shifts in Consumer Engagement and Media Business Models
- 11 Media Industries’ Management Characteristics and Challenges in a Converging Digital World
- Policy
- 12 Global Media Industries and Media Policy
- 13 Media Concentration in the Age of the Internet and Mobile Phones
- Practices
- Innovation
- 14 Making (Sense of) Media Innovations
- 15 Start-up Ecosystems Between Affordance Networks, Symbolic Form, and Cultural Practice
- Work Conditions
- 16 Precarity in Media Work
- 17 Making It in a Freelance World
- 18 Diversity and Opportunity in the Media Industries
- 19 Labour and the Next Internet
- Affective Labour
- 20 Affective Labour and Media Work
- 21 Affective Qualities of Creative Labour
- 22 A Business of One or Nurturing the Craft: Who are You?
- Professions
- Music
- 23 Music in Times of Streaming: Transformation and Debate
- 24 Popular Music, Streaming, and Promotional Media: Enduring and Emerging Industrial Logics
- Television
- 25 Show Me the Money: How Revenue Strategies Change the Creative Possibilities of Internet-Distributed Television
- 26 Flexibility, Innovation, and Precarity in the Television Industry
- Social Media
- 27 Creator Management in the Social Media Entertainment Industry
- 28 #Dreamjob: The Promises and Perils of a Creative Career in Social Media
- Public Relations and Advertising
- 29 Redefining Advertising in a Changing Media Landscape
- 30 Perceptions and Realities of the Integration of Advertising and Public Relations
- Digital Games
- 31 Game Production Logics at Work: Convergence and Divergence
- 32 Reflections on the Shifts and Swerves of the Global Games Industry
- Journalism
- 33 ‘It Never Stops’: The Implicit Norm of Working Long Hours in Entrepreneurial Journalism
- 34 Transmedia Production: Key Steps in Creating a Storyworld
- Conclusion
- 35 Making Media: Observations and Futures
- Author Biographies
Summary
Social media entertainment is a rapidly formalizing proto-industry in which creators – influencers, YouTubers, vloggers, gameplayers – play a central role. They use a variety of platforms to engage with global fan communities for commercial and cultural value, and operate outside the traditional structures of legacy media. Creator management takes on many forms. This chapter discusses creator management on three different levels: platforms, intermediaries, and the creators themselves.
Introduction
For little over a decade, we have witnessed the rapid rise of creators, alternatively called content creators, influencers, YouTubers, vloggers, live streamers, gameplayers, KOLS, and Wang Hong (in China). Forbes’ annual list of the most successful creators extends across multiple content verticals to include ‘entertainer’ Lily Singh (aka Superwoman II), game player Markiplier, beauty vlogger Michele Phan, and toy unboxer Evan Tube (O’Connor, 2017). These comprise but a small portion of a vast global wave of online cultural producers fostering and blending old and new forms of media entrepreneurialism, management, creative labour, and user practices.
Operating within the proto-industry of social media entertainment, ‘creator’ has become the industry term to describe social media users harnessing multiple and global-scaling platforms to engage in media entrepreneurialism (Cunningham & Craig, 2019). Creators have emerged natively on and across multiple platforms, fuelled by network effects and diverse technological and commercial affordances, to generate their own media brands. The global social media platform landscape continues to expand and foster new modalities, including text, image, audio, video on demand, and livestreaming. A short list includes first generation platforms, Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube; mobile apps like Instagram, Musical.ly, and Snapchat; and livestreaming platforms including Twitch and YouNow. China's competing Wang Hong creator industry fosters an even more competitive platform landscape with more advanced and better integrated commercial features, including Youku, WeChat, and Weibo.
Creator entrepreneurialism has contributed to exponential growth in revenue, albeit difficult to measure in scale and influence. A report on the ‘New Creator Economy’ (Shapiro & Aneja, 2018) described 15 million online creators generating revenue off these platforms in the United States alone.
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- Information
- Making MediaProduction, Practices, and Professions, pp. 363 - 374Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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