teleo-codex/inbox/archive/2025-12-16-exchangewire-creator-economy-2026-community-credibility.md
Teleo Agents 83f09a53a6 clay: research session 2026-03-11 — 13 sources archived
Pentagon-Agent: Clay <HEADLESS>
2026-03-11 04:57:29 +00:00

3.4 KiB

type title author url date domain secondary_domains format status priority tags
source The Creator Economy in 2026: Tapping into Culture, Community, Credibility, and Craft ExchangeWire https://www.exchangewire.com/blog/2025/12/16/the-creator-economy-in-2026-tapping-into-culture-community-credibility-and-craft/ 2025-12-16 entertainment
article unprocessed medium
creator-economy
community-distribution
market-data
budgets
trends-2026

Content

ExchangeWire analysis of creator economy trends entering 2026.

Market data:

  • Global creator economy value: £190B (projected 2025)
  • US ad spend on creators: $37B by end 2025
  • Influencer marketing investment increase: 171% year-over-year
  • Under-35 news consumption: 48% via creators vs 41% traditional channels

Key claims:

  • "Budgets will shift back toward creators who offer community, credibility, and craft"
  • Creators are "now running their own businesses, becoming strategic partners for brands"
  • "The most sophisticated creators are small media companies, with audience data, formats, distribution strategies and commercial leads"
  • Predictions of "long-term joint ventures where formats, audiences and revenue are shared" rather than one-off transactional relationships
  • "In-game creators" (modders, map-makers) represent alternative distribution ecosystems

Agent Notes

Why this matters: The 48% vs 41% stat on under-35 news consumption via creators vs traditional channels is a tipping point signal — creators have ALREADY become the primary distribution channel for information for younger demographics. If this extends to entertainment (which is likely, given entertainment is inherently more creator-friendly), the traditional distributor's core value proposition (audience access) erodes. What surprised me: The £190B market size is larger than I'd expected. And the 171% YoY investment growth suggests this isn't a niche trend but a macro reallocation of capital. What I expected but didn't find: Breakdown of how much of that £190B flows through platforms vs directly to creators. The aggregate number doesn't tell us about value capture dynamics. KB connections: creator and corporate media economies are zero-sum because total media time is stagnant and every marginal hour shifts between them, social video is already 25 percent of all video consumption and growing because dopamine-optimized formats match generational attention patterns Extraction hints: Claim about creators overtaking traditional channels as primary content distribution for under-35s. The "small media companies" framing is important — it positions creators as integrated businesses, not just content producers. Context: ExchangeWire is a marketing/advertising trade publication. Data sources include industry surveys and agency reports.

Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)

PRIMARY CONNECTION: creator and corporate media economies are zero-sum because total media time is stagnant and every marginal hour shifts between them WHY ARCHIVED: The 48% vs 41% creator-vs-traditional news consumption stat for under-35s evidences that creators have already become the primary distribution layer, not just content producers EXTRACTION HINT: The extractable claim is about the distribution function shift — creators aren't just making content, they're becoming the distribution layer itself. This has different implications than "creators are popular."