Influencer Brief Generator
Create a simple influencer brief with goals, deliverables, usage rights and FTC notes.
Create a simple influencer brief with goals, deliverables, usage rights and FTC notes.
I built this Influencer Brief Generator because influencer planning usually breaks in the same place: people try to make a serious campaign decision from one number. A follower count looks simple, but it does not tell you if the creator has a US-heavy audience, if their viewers trust them, if the content format needs a full shoot day, or if the brand wants to reuse the video as paid media. At JSAN Media, after years of planning creator campaigns, the pattern became clear to me: a useful tool should give a range, explain the logic, and then push the user to save the assumptions in a tracker.
Use this tool as the first pass, not the final contract. The calculator gives you a working estimate so you can decide whether the deal is worth discussing. The real quote should still include deliverables, deadline, product value, approval rounds, usage rights, exclusivity, category sensitivity and proof of performance. A finance creator with a small but trusted audience can charge more than a larger comedy page, while a TikTok video with strong average views can beat a profile with higher followers but weak reach.
For the US market, I recommend thinking in two layers. First, calculate a base rate using followers or expected views. Second, adjust it for the business value of the audience. Tech, SaaS, finance, business, health and professional education can carry higher CPMs because a single customer may be worth more. Food, fashion, beauty, gaming, travel and lifestyle can still perform very well, but the final number depends heavily on creative quality, audience location and how much the brand can reuse the content.
If you are a creator, save your own profile inside Influencer Planner before you pitch. Add your Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, LinkedIn and X numbers, your average engagement rate, your best niches and your private rate notes. This makes it easier to answer brands quickly without guessing every time. It also protects you from accepting a low number just because the brand says they have a small budget. Your planner becomes your own rate memory.
If you are a brand or agency, do not use this result to force every creator into the same price. Use it to create a shortlist, then review the creator's content, audience comments, posting consistency and previous partnerships. A clean campaign tracker is more important than a perfect first estimate. Once you save creators, planned content, due dates and payments, your next campaign becomes easier because you can see what worked instead of rebuilding the plan from scratch.
The best way to use this page is to run the estimate, create a free account, and store the campaign assumptions. Add the creator, their quoted price, their platform, their content deliverables and the expected post date. Then add your content plan so you know exactly what needs to be shot, edited, approved and published. This is why the product is called Influencer Planner: the calculator starts the decision, but the planner protects the execution.
The numbers are especially useful when you compare them month after month. A one-time estimate can help today, but a saved planning record becomes more valuable over time. If you keep a creator profile, campaign list and content calendar together, you can see whether your audience is growing, whether your rates should move up, and whether certain content formats are doing more work than others. This is the part most free calculators miss: the decision does not end when the result appears on screen.
I also prefer this privacy-first approach because creators put sensitive business notes into planners. Your brand boundaries, rate minimums, audience mix, private campaign notes and unpublished content ideas should not be treated like public profile text. The app is designed so users can maintain their own planning data while the admin still has enough visibility to suspend misuse and keep the platform clean. That balance matters if the product is going to be useful beyond a quick calculator visit.