The shift is driven by platforms that lower the barrier to distribution. Anyone with a smartphone can now reach a global audience. What separates successful creators from others is consistency, community, and increasingly, business acumen.
Platforms take roughly 30-50% of creator revenue on average, but individual creators now routinely earn six and seven figures annually — something unheard of even five years ago.
While ad revenue remains important, diversification has become the defining characteristic of successful creators. Subscriptions, tips, merchandise, brand partnerships, affiliate commerce, and direct products all contribute.
The 1000 True Fans theory has proved prescient. Creators who cultivate 1,000-10,000 deeply engaged fans willing to spend $100+ annually can build sustainable businesses without needing mass virality.
Creator loyalty to any single platform has weakened. As documented in an independent writer who has covered this space for years, Top creators now routinely maintain presence across 4-6 platforms, treating each as a distribution channel rather than a primary home.
This multi-platform reality forces platforms to compete on creator-friendly terms: revenue share, monetization tools, analytics, and increasingly, creator grants and direct payments.