Facebook Is Paying Musicians Up to $50,000 For Live Audio Performances

Facebook Paying Musicians Up to $50,000 for Live Audio Performances

Facebook is paying musicians up to $50,000 to use its Clubhouse clone feature – Live Audio Rooms.

This past Summer, CEO Mark Zuckerberg promised that his company would establish a $1 billion creator fund to pay talent through 2022. Recently there was a report published that details how some of that money is being spent. Facebook is paying musicians up to $50,000 to use Live Audio Rooms.

“Facebook is offering to pay musicians and other creators $10,000 to $50,000 per session on its five-month-old live audio product, plus a fee for guests of $10,000 or more,” the report reads. Facebook reportedly wants to establish a relationship with creators to host four to six sessions that are at least a half-hour in length or more.

Facebook’s Live Audio Rooms feature launched in June for users in the United States. It’s positioned alongside other audio-oriented products from Facebook, including podcasts, music, and ‘Soundbites.’

Facebook joins a number of platforms and search engines that attracting talent. TikTok, Snap, Twitter, and YouTube all have some type of creator fund that pays out, just not as much as Facebook.

Which social media platforms pay musicians & artists?

  • Facebook – The platform is paying ‘up to’ $50,000 to musicians who agree to the terms outlined above.
  • TikTok – TikTok established a creator fund with $70 million to offer payouts to creators who use the platform. TikTok committed to increasing that fund to $300 million and opening it to more countries.
  • Snapchat – Snapchat introduced Spotlight Challenges to its community of creators to encourage the use of new features on the platform. The company started by paying one million dollars per day, but lost creators after ending the big payouts in May 2021.
  • Twitter – Twitter launched its Spark Program to discover and reward Twitter Spaces creators with “technical, financial, and marketing support.” Those who apply to the program and get accepted receive a stipend of $2,500 a month to create content and $500 in monthly ad credits to promote shows.
  • YouTube – Even YouTube has a creator fund for artists who use its YouTube Shorts feature. The $100 million fund will be distributed over 2021-2022 to anyone who uses the YouTube Shorts feature.

There are a number of media companies willing to pay creators to use their platforms. Meta-owned Facebook has deep pockets to offer creators a nice pocket full of change to use its Live Audio Rooms.

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