---
title: 'How Much to Charge for YouTube Sponsorships (Full Pricing Guide)'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=ezpbeYKXps0'
video_id: 'ezpbeYKXps0'
date: 2026-06-28
duration_sec: 0
---

# How Much to Charge for YouTube Sponsorships (Full Pricing Guide)

> Source: [How Much to Charge for YouTube Sponsorships (Full Pricing Guide)](https://youtube.com/watch?v=ezpbeYKXps0)

## Summary



## Transcript

You ever wondered, "Am I charging too
little or way too much for my
sponsorships?" You're not alone. Most
creators have no clue what their content
is actually worth. They're scared to
charge too much and scare brands away,
or they're scared to charge too little
and leave money on the table. The good
news is you're not alone. And in this
video, I'm going to be giving a complete
deep dive into how to price your videos
for sponsorships. For a little
background, my name is Brandon
Pomearati. I'm the founder of Adhesive
Media. We're a sponsorship
representation agency and we work with
over 150 YouTube creators. In the last 3
years, we've closed over $18 million in
sponsorships with over a 100 different
brands. So, when I give advice here, I
know what I'm talking about. The first
thing I want to get into is why do most
creators price their sponsorships wrong?
And it boils down to a few reasons.
Number one is you're guessing your
pricing. You're basing your pricing
based on your friend's channel who might
have a totally different audience, a
totally different genre, a totally
different viewership than you. Number
two, you may have missing context. You
may not know what the brand actually
cares about. And the truth is they care
about sales. They don't really care
about your production cost. They don't
care how about how much effort you put
into the sponsorship. And that is the
brutal truth of it. And the third reason
that you are probably pricing your
sponsorship wrong is your mindset. For
90% of YouTube creators where YouTube is
their main source of income, your
motivation should be to lock in the
right sponsors for long-term deals. Yes,
the deal might be at a slightly lower
cost, but as a YouTuber, we'd recommend
having longerterm deals so you could
actually plan out your revenue and know
that you have consistent money coming in
every month. It's also way better for
your audience to have a few sponsors
that you work with consistently than a
different sponsor every video. So, when
it comes to the foundation of
sponsorship pricing, the first term that
you'll want to understand is a CPM. CPM
means cost per,000 views, and it's
generally based on either average views
or guaranteed views. guaranteed views.
I'll get into what that is later, but
let's say your channel averages a
100,000 views per video and you charge a
$40 CPM. Your sponsorship price would be
$4,000. Let's say you guarantee 80,000
views and you have a $50 CPM. Then your
sponsorship price would also be $4,000.
Now, what we specialize in selling are
60-second midroll integrations. the ones
that you've seen all over YouTube with
companies like AG1, BetterHelp, Factor,
DraftKings, and more. And what we've
seen is most integrations fall between a
$20 and $60 CPM for these type of deals.
What I'm going to get into next is the
10 factors that affect your pricing that
will either get you closer to $60 CPM or
closer to a $20 CPM. Like I mentioned,
this pricing model is for 60-second
midroll integrations with general
products. At the end of the video, I'm
also going to get through how to price
for dedicated videos, longer
sponsorships, usage rights, and more.
But for now, we're going to start with
the standard most popular ad format,
which is a one minute midroll
integration. Number one is your US
audience percentage. So, if you're a
US-based creator and you are planning to
do a sponsorship with a company that
sells to people in the United States,
then your US percentage is one of the
biggest factors that get into your
pricing. The difference between a 40% US
audience and an 80% US audience means
two times as many people will be
eligible buyers for that sponsor's
product. So, if you have a higher US
audience percentage, ideally above 70%,
you're going to be closer to the $60
CPM. The next thing is audience age. For
most products that are sponsoring
YouTube channels, maybe other than
mobile games, they are targeting a more
mature audience because they'll have
more buying power. They'll have more
spending power. A YouTube channel where
it's all 10 to 15 year olds watching
will not have their own credit cards and
will not have their own spending power.
Whereas a channel where everyone is 25
plus or 35 plus will generally have more
disposable income to spend on the
sponsor's product, thus driving your CPM
up. The number three thing that affects
your pricing is your engagement rate.
What we generally look for are channels
with a 7% engagement rate, which means
likes plus comments divided by views is
7%. And more specifically, what I'm
looking at is a 7% comment rate. So that
means for every,000 views you get, you
want to get seven comments. For every
100,000 views you get, you want to have
700 comments. What that means is your
audience is engaging with your content.
they're making comments and they have
more trust in you as the host of the
content to eventually buy whatever
product you are promoting. The number
four thing that would drive your CPM up.
And this could be enough to get you all
the way to a 60 CPM, even if you're
missing a lot of the other factors is
your sponsorship renewal rate. And
basically what this is, this is the rate
by which sponsors come back to sponsor
you again. If every sponsor you work
with comes back with an annual deal to
work with you, you're going to be out of
sponsorship spots and thus you're going
to have less quantity of available spots
and you can sell them at a higher rate.
So let's say you do four videos a month.
You do your first sponsorship, that one
comes back and books once a month. You
do your second one, that one comes back,
books once a month. And your third one
comes back and books once a month. You
only have one spot left. And what you
could tell this last spot is, hey,
everyone I've worked with has renewed.
So we're driving our price up. We've
worked with channels where that's
happened and we've seen channels be able
to increase their price. We had one
channel that started at $7,500 a spot
and now we're selling spots at $22,000
per sponsorship because there is
literally no more space available and so
many brands want to sponsor them. That's
only possible because the channel gets a
renewal deal on every single brand that
they work with. The fifth factor that
affects your pricing will be your
viewership consistency. Brands want to
see that you have an audience, a
returning audience. What that means to
them is you have a fan base or an
audience base that keeps coming back for
more and they love your content. When
they love your content and they have an
affinity to you as a host, they are more
likely to purchase whatever product you
are sponsored by. The other benefit of
having a good consistent viewership is
brands will have more certainty than
when they spend a certain amount of
money with you, they know how many views
they're going to get out of that. So, it
gives them more certainty and it feels
like they're taking a less risky bet by
paying you more for that sponsorship. A
very high viewership consistency is a
20% variation in views. So, let's say
your average views are 100,000 per
video. You don't want to have any views
dipping below 80,000 or going above
120,000. That is a consistent
viewership. So, 20% up or down means
your viewership is very consistent. The
next thing that affects your ad pricing
is ad placement. Basically, what this
means is where is the ad placed in the
video? Generally, we recommend placing
the ad in the first 30% of the video. If
you put it at the end of the video after
there's already the viewership drop off
and the retention drop off, then
sponsors will be more likely to lowball
you on their offer because there's going
to be less people seeing the ad at the
end of the video. The seventh thing here
is ad frequency. Let's say you are
posting three videos a week, which is 12
per month, and you have a sponsorship in
every single video. chances are your
pricing may actually decrease versus if
you have less spots available. On the
other end, let's say you have those 12
spots, but they're all recurring brands
and maybe 11 of them are filled, then
you could actually sell that last spot
at a high rate because like I mentioned
earlier, you already have demand filling
it. So, with this whole thing, there's a
supply and demand balance as well where
if you have less supply available, but
there's a lot of brands that want to
sponsor you, you can increase your rates
and get closer to that 60 CPM or higher
rate. The eighth factor that'll affect
your pricing is if your face is on
screen. This is a universal thing that
I've seen with channels. If you are an
animated or cartoon or no face channel,
generally the audience will have less of
a relationship to the actual host of the
channel and thus your sponsorship
pricing will be way way lower.
Especially if you're talking about a
physical product, the brand will want
you to use it on screen. And if you're
not showing that on screen, your
sponsorship pricing will be lower. The
ninth thing that affects your pricing is
how creative your ad read is and does it
actually tie into the topic of the
video. So if you're a biohacking creator
and you're going to get sponsored by a
sauna company and you're doing a video
where you're talking about saunas and
you're talking about the benefits of
saunas, that one minute integration will
definitely be on the higher end of CPMs,
probably way higher than a 60 CPM
because biohacking creators can charge
so much. So you really want to think
about how creative your ad reads. And
the last thing here is the brand and
channel alignment. And so this is how
much does the product align with your
channel and how much does it align with
you? Can you give a personal endorsement
of the product? Do you use the product?
Do a lot of your audience do could they
use the product? Is there alignment
between that product and the genre of
your channel? So that's the last thing
you want to think about. And this
arguably could have one of the biggest
impacts on your pricing. Overall, the
better you score on these, you're going
to be closer to a 60 CPM or even higher.
And if you're missing a lot of these,
you're going to be closer to a $20 CPM
and lower. And as a reminder, these are
for one minute midroll ad placements. If
you're doing dedicated videos, this
whole CPM model isn't as applicable, and
we'll talk about that later in the
video. So, I know this is a lot of
information, and it might be tough for
you still to figure out that price even
with all these factors. So, what I'm
going to be doing is creating a custom
GPT. And what that will do is it'll ask
you a set of questions about your
channel. You'll answer it and it'll spit
out proposed pricing for Midroll
sponsorships. If you're interested in
that, I'm still working on it at the
time of this video. So, please comment
below and probably by the time this
video is done being edited, I'll have
that ready and I could reply to your
comment with the link to that custom
GPT. So, now that you have the CPM that
you want to charge for sponsorships,
it's time to put together your price for
a midroll sponsorship integration. Your
price will be a CPM times your average
views or times your guaranteed views.
So, let's say you landed at a $40 CPM.
Your average views are 100,000 per
video. You would charge $4,000. When it
comes to guaranteed views, let's get
into that in the next section so you can
determine if you want to offer a view
guarantee and if that's something you
are comfortable offering. So, now you
might be wondering, what is a view
guarantee and should I offer one? Let me
first explain what a view guarantee is,
how it works, and then I'll help you
determine if you need to offer that for
your channel. So, first, what is a view
guarantee? A view guarantee is when you
offer to an advertiser a guaranteed
amount of views for a certain
sponsorship within a certain time frame.
So, let's say your channel averages
100,000 views a video. You might tell
that, "I'm going to guarantee 100,000
views within the first 30 days. and if
it doesn't hit 100,000 views, I will
place your ad in another upcoming video.
That's one option is you could place in
an upcoming video. Another option is you
can say, "Hey, if it doesn't hit the
100,000 views, we will prorrate the
invoice by the percentage below the
100,000 views." So, let's say you hit
70,000 views. Out of 100,000 views, you
would charge the advertiser 70% of the
sponsorship cost. You would basically
deduct 30% from the invoice. And so view
guarantees are great for channels with
inconsistent viewership. If your views
go from 20,000 to 100,000 to 500,000 to
40,000 per video and it's all over the
place, a view guarantee is great because
generally when sponsors are looking at
average pricing, they're basing it off
the minimum safe threshold. So if you're
going between 20,000 and 100,000 views
per video, they're going to price your
channel at like 20 or 30,000 average
views. But if you know a certain video
is going to pop off, you'll want to
guarantee views. So, the advertiser has
some certainty and you can charge a CPM
based on a higher amount of views.
Remember, if you have a $40 CPM and
they're basing it on 30,000 average
views, that's $1,200. If you have a 40
CPM and they're basing it off 100,000
average views, that's $4,000. So, you
want to be very intentional. If you have
an inconsistent channel, you'll probably
want to offer a view guarantee. Most
creators will prefer to have the
pr-rated option on their view guarantee
where they can actually deduct the
percentage of the invoice rather than
posting another ad. So, make sure to
clarify that with the advertiser if
that's something that you want to offer.
The last thing I'll mention on the view
guarantee side of things is if you have
a very consistent viewership, like I
mentioned earlier, let's say you average
100,000 views a video and your videos
are all between 80 and 120K, you
probably won't need a view guarantee
because your audience is already
consistent. Quick pause. If you want a
full CPM breakdown per genre, make sure
to check out sponsorship toolbox.com.
It's a full resource, free resource we
have. We don't even ask for your email.
And we have a CPM breakdowns per genre.
And also, like I mentioned, if you want
that custom GPT where you can input
details about your channel and it spits
out your sponsorship pricing, drop that
in the comments and I will send you the
link to that. For the next part of this
video, I'm going to be going through
four sample channels. Probably you've
heard of a few of them. And we're going
to calculate their sponsorship pricing
live and what I think that they charge
per each sponsorship. So, let's move it
over to this screen and I'm going to
share my screen and we're going to get
through it. So, the first channel that
we're going to get into, I don't know if
you've heard of it, but it's Mr. Beast.
Probably you haven't. He's I know he's a
pretty unknown channel and we're going
to be going through his channel. I'm
going to be giving some sample numbers
since I don't obviously I don't know the
demographics behind it and we're going
to talk about what we think his
sponsorship pricing would be. Okay. So
channel is obviously massive. We're
going to go through each of these and
give a little bit estimate. So US
audience percentage generally what I'm
seeing for entertainment channels like
this especially with him he has such a
large international reach is his US
audience is probably between 30 and 40%.
We'll give him the benefit of the doubt
and put it at 40%. Audience age. I can't
pinpoint the number here, but my guess
is it's low. Most people that are
watching Mr. Beast are probably a little
bit on the younger end. Uh, in terms of
engagement rate, let's look at these
right here. So, we've got 3 million
likes and 42,000 comments. It goes out
to 3.5 out of this. It's a little bit
under 3% engagement rate. Another one
here. We're going to look at 3 million
out of 100 million. About 3% again,
we're going to go here. Here's about 5
million plus this 5.5 million out of
250,000.
It's about two and a half%. So his
engagement rate is on the lower end.
Sponsorship renewal rate. I can't really
calculate this right now. I don't know
how many sponsors are coming back to Mr.
Beast. He's a little bit of unique
example where it's an massive brand
awareness push and it is the biggest
YouTuber on YouTube. So he gets some
sort of benefit about that. Viewership
consistency. As big as the channel is,
it is actually quite consistent for how
big it is. um as in an advertiser pretty
much knows they're going to get about
120 million views on their sponsorship.
So this one I would say is good. Ad
placement, he's placing them pretty
well. Ad frequencies, you know, he's
doing about two videos a month, so it's
pretty good here. Host on screen, yes,
he's on screen. Creative ads, yes, he
keeps them as attaining. And then brand
and channel alignment, generally if
you're sponsoring Mr. Beast, so you're
going to have a good alignment. So based
on this, what I would say if you're
looking at $120 million views a video in
terms of the CPM range between a $20 and
$60, just because the audience is lower
and the US audience is pretty low, I'm
guessing he's somewhere around a 25ish
CPM. And so total pricing here would be
about $3 million or a 60-second
sponsorship on Mr. Beast. Yes, it's
crazy. Mr. Beast is huge. So Mr. Beast,
great job. Probably you're charging
between$2 and $4 million a sponsorship.
That's my guess. So, let's get into the
next channel. So, the next channel here
is Ali Abdal. I've actually watched a
few of his videos when I was thinking
about starting this YouTube channel. So,
Ali, shout out to you. So, for his
videos, let's get into it. So, US
audience, my guess is he actually has a
big UK audience as well, but it is like
solid business content. I think
productivity in general, people want to
learn how to grow their online brand is
a pretty, I guess, American thing. So,
my guess is he's also probably about
50%. It's still a little bit low, but
not bad. Audience age, I would say, is
more mixed. It's definitely older than
Beast. Uh, and he probably has a ton of
people between 20 and 30. So, that's
great. Engage rate, let's look at some
of these. So, if we look at 2,00 here in
terms of how many comments he's getting,
200 here, it's about 5% on this. There
are tools that will give you this, but
I'm just eyeballing this just for the
quickness of it. About 8,000 this 8.5K
out of here, another 4%. Another one
here, 7,000 plus this is about 7.6 about
4% as well. So, still his engagement
rate is a little bit on the lower end.
So, that's good. Sponsorship renewal
rate, I don't have the data in front of
me, but I do know that he has a lot of
recurring sponsors. Um, and his audience
are buying, so that's great. Viewership
consistency is a little, you know, I
think the last two are a little bit of
flops, but if you look at it generally,
he's getting about 150,000, but it is a
little bit inconsistent. So, I would say
slightly inconsistent. Um, ad placement,
I know he's placing them, you know,
standard ad placements. Ad frequency, I
think it's pretty standard here on his
channel as well. Host on screen, this is
a yes. If you've seen his ads, his ads
are great integrations. And then
generally, he's only working with brands
that are a fit, whether it's education,
productivity, money, personal brand
related. So, generally the brand and
channel alignment on his channel is
really good. The other thing I will
mention for a creator like this is Ali
Abdal is making millions of dollars from
his course sales. And so he's probably a
lot pickier with the sponsors he takes
because he doesn't necessarily need the
money from the sponsors a lot of the
time. My guess is he's charging closer
to the $50 or even higher, closer to
maybe even an $80 CPM per sponsorships.
And so probably what he's seeing with
views like this at around 150k views a
video is a $10,000 or more per
sponsorship placement here. I wouldn't
even be surprised if he's charging
$20,000 of sponsorship, which would be
an even higher CPM just given the high
high demand to work with someone like
him. So then that's where it comes
again, the ad frequency, the supply
demand. For some it's in such high
demand, it probably drives up pricing
like crazy. Um, so that is Ali Abdal.
The next one we're going to get into is
an automotive channel called Big Time.
Automotive channels generally have a
pretty good US audience. It's probably
between 60ish%. It's a little bit larger
channel. Might drive down the US
audience, but I would say US audience
here is definitely higher at around 60%.
Audience age here is probably older than
the past two that we saw. So, probably
looking at something like a 30 plus
audience, which is pretty good. In terms
of engagement rates, we're looking at
50,000 likes. 2,000 comments is about 53
out of 750. It's about 7% which is
pretty good. Another one 50 plus
another,000. It's another 6% there. This
video we're looking here about 58 total
engagements out of this is about 6%.
Engagement rate is pretty good at around
6%. In terms of sponsorship renewal
rate, usually I look at it by just
looking at sponsor here and seeing who's
coming back. I also have another tool
that I can use but can't really show on
this video. Sponsor renewal rate is
pretty decent on this channel. So that's
good. And then viewership consistency.
But looking at viewership consistency,
it's actually pretty good. Uh I would
say it's like medium. a advertiser
probably will get they can bank on
getting about 700,000 views on a video
they sponsor. Um, in terms of ad
placement, typical automotive channel,
they're probably placing in the first
five minutes of video. So, it's good
here. Uh, ad frequency looks like
they're doing about one video a week
placing an ad in every single one. So,
it's pretty standard here, I would say.
Um, host is on screen. Yes. Creative ad
reads. We'd have to watch it, but
depending on how like, you know, are
they are they working with an automotive
product? If they're sponsored by
Shopify, do they use Shopify? Um, and so
these ones I would say is likely pretty
standard on this channel. This is mo
mostly for you to think about for your
channel. I would probably say they are
pricing their sponsorships around a uh
30 $35 CPM here. And assuming they get
700,000 views a video, we're looking at
about 21 to $28,000 per sponsorship.
That's my guess on what they're charging
for their sponsorships. All right. And
the last channel that I'm going to be
talking about is Welker Farms. And if
you know me, you know I love my farming
channels on YouTube because they perform
so well for advertisers. So, namely,
farming channels have incredibly high US
audiences. I wouldn't be surprised if
it's 75% for this channel, which is
great. Generally, their audiences are
older. Most of the audience will be
above 45 plus. Engagement rate
generally, I mean, they have higher
farming. So, you look at 14,000 likes
with another 200 comments. About 9%
right there. Here, another one. 18,000
likes out of here. We're looking at
another comment engagement is a little
bit low. So I would say their engagement
rate is still good. They're getting a
lot of likes. Say good work on the
comment engagement. Sponsorship renewal
rate. Um I don't have it here, but I do
know they are renewed by a handful of
brands. So I'll put this on good.
Viewership consistency. Viewership
consistency here is pretty good.
Basically everything is between 180 and
about 250k views about a 30% um
variation. So it's not too bad. So I
would say this is pretty good. Ad
placement. We can find their
sponsorships. Generally, they're
probably placing about the first third
of the video, which is good. Ad
frequency here is good. Host on screen
is a yes. Creative ads, depending on
what product they're in, I would
probably say this is medium here.
Generally, farming, their ads are like
somewhat creative. They just say, "Hey,
I use this product." That's it. And then
brand and channel alignment. It's
generally harder to find farming uh
brands that will sponsor them. So, it's
just general products that they use. So,
I'll call this okay. With all that said,
my guess is they're charging about a 40
CPM for here. Given the US audience,
audience age, that's what's pushing it
the most here. and the viewership
consistency. And so most likely what
I'll say here is based on that 220k
average views, they're probably charging
around $8.8,000 per sponsorship. That is
my guess for this channel. They probably
crush for their advertisers. So
hopefully that's helpful going through
some example channels so you can get an
idea of how I look at pricing. The next
thing I want to talk about are what are
some pricing extras and add-ons that you
could do that would actually increase
your pricing or that the brand might be
asking for that you will counter with a
higher price. So number one is longer
ads. So what I'm generally seeing, like
I spoke about, we're talking about
60-second ads. Generally, if we're
talking about a 90-second ad, you can
see about a 20 to 30% increase in price.
If we're looking at 2 to 3 minutes, you
might increase your price by 40 to 60%.
And if we're talking about a dedicated
video, generally we're charging anywhere
from two to three times the normal rate
because it's a whole video talking about
their product. Maybe for semi-dedicated,
we're charging about 50% more. The next
thing that will increase pricing is or
an actual add-on fee at the end is usage
rights. So, if you want to give the
brand the right to basically use your
creative that you made in the ad towards
their paid advertising, you can
generally charge about 20 to 30% of the
sponsorship cost for 30 days of access
to the usage rights. Obviously, depends
on where they're going to be using your
name and like list. If they're putting
on a billboard, you might want to charge
more. If they're putting it in TV
advertising, you might want to charge
more. So, just make sure to clarify with
them what they are asking for in the
usage, where they're going to be using
it, and then you can charge based on
that. The next thing is exclusivity. So,
generally most brands will ask for one
or two months of exclusivity at your
standard price, and that's fine. But if
they're asking for a six-month lockout
where you can't work with any other
competing brands after just doing one ad
placement, you'll definitely want to
give push back on that or try to charge
more. Generally, I'm only seeing six
month exclusivity if a brand is locking
you in on an annual contract. So, make
sure to check that out on the contract
with the brand. By the way, I'm going to
be making a contract video next, so make
sure to keep an eye out and subscribe to
see that. If you already have a
consistent viewership and they're asking
for a view guarantee, you can also
probably charge a 10 or 20% premium on
your normal pricing just because there's
some risk that if it underperforms, um,
you're going to either have to refund
them a certain amount or post another ad
for them. And the last thing, which will
actually decrease your pricing a little
bit, is if they offer like, hey, I want
to sponsor three or six videos. Uh,
generally it's okay to offer like a 20
10 or 20% discount if that's what
they're asking for. Um, so that's just
another thing to keep in mind when it
comes to your pricing. The next thing I
want to help you out with is when you're
actually pitching your channel to a
brand and you say your price and they
come back and they're like, "What?
That's so crazy." Obviously, you want to
pitch a fair price. And if you feel like
it's a fair price based on the factors
that I mentioned and other brands are
seeing good return, you'll generally
just want to counter with the facts.
Hey, our US audience is really good. We
have other sponsors that are getting
renewed and this is why we are charging
this price. On the other end, if you are
charging a super high price and every
every advertiser is coming back and say,
"Hey, we got zero sales. Hey, this isn't
doing well. Hey, this only hit 10% of
our target." You may want to actually
consider lowering your price so you can
lock in some advertisers for longerterm
deals if that's your goal. And in my
opinion, for a YouTuber that's full-time
and sponsorships is their income, I
think locking in long-term deals should
be the goal. The next thing I want to go
over, and it's a common question I get,
is, "Hey, Brandon, when should I
increase pricing?" And generally, you
should increase pricing based on any of
these factors. Number one is your
viewership goes up. It's kind of the
most obvious reason to increase pricing.
Number two is you've changed your
content and now you're getting higher
engagement rates or a higher US
percentage and the or higher comment
rates and the audience is just generally
higher value, then you can increase your
pricing. And number three, which is the
most common way, is you have a queue or
you have a weight list of brands that
want to sponsor you. Like I mentioned
earlier, if the supply is low and the
demand is high, you're getting a lot of
renewal rates and there's no more spots
available. That's when you can generally
increase your pricing from your normal.
Like the example I gave, we had a
creator that was charging 7,500 to
start. They had a bunch of renewal rates
and now they're locking in sponsorships
at 22,000. So hopefully this is helpful.
If you want more information about
pricing, number one, make sure to check
out sponsorship toolbox.com where I have
a CPM breakdown per genre there. Like I
mentioned, you don't need to even input
your email. It's a free resource that I
published online. Number two is you want
to either bust out a piece of paper or
comment down below and I'll send you the
custom GPT and go through the factors
that I mentioned and figure out what
your pricing is. Even feel free to
comment. You can send me a link to your
channel and some details about your
demographic and some of the information
that I mentioned and I'll reply back to
comment with what I think your pricing
should be for a sponsorship. And number
three is once you figure out that
pricing, make sure to update your media
kits, update your email templates, and
uh basically be ready to pitch yourself
at that new pricing. So now that you
know how to price your channel, the next
step is actually landing your first
deal. And that is a whole different
game. If you want to learn how to pitch
your channel, how to email brands, and
how to set up yourself for sponsorship
success, check out my video, the
ultimate beginner's guide to
sponsorships, linked down below. And
like I mentioned from my first video,
I'm not selling any courses. I'm not
selling anything on this channel.
Anything I will be publishing will be
free on this YouTube channel and free on
sponsorship toolbox.com. So, the least
that you could do to help would be to
subscribe to this channel. It would mean
the world to me. We're trying to hit a
thousand subscribers by the end of the
quarter on September 30th, 2025. So, if
you could subscribe, that would be
awesome. Other than that, thanks so much
for watching another video on the
channel and we will be back next
