Influencer marketing agency Billion Dollar Boy is launching a new membership community that’s “dedicated to empowering emerging creators in the business of being a creator.”
The community, called FiveTwoNine, will have both online and offline components, including a flagship space in London. That space will soon open for a four-month pilot phase where, in partnership with FiveTwoNine’s founding brand partner, Lipton, and six founding creators/creator brands (more on them in a sec), it’ll offer free access to amenities like soundproofed recording rooms, a podcast studio, and meeting spaces.
After the four-month pilot period, access to the London space–and any other future brick-and-morter spaces–will be priced on a tiered basis, “which will be introduced at flexible rates determined by the depth of resources and masterclasses creators wish to access,” Billion Dollar Boy says.
FiveTwoNine’s online component launches this fall, and will operate on a similar tiered pricing structure. Online resources will include masterclasses from creators and other industry experts, focused on topics like business skills, career trajectory, and brand partnerships.
Billion Dollar Boy says it chose to open FiveTwoNine because research from influencer insights platform CORQ shows that 73% of digital content creators want “fast-track, affordable access to business coaches and consultancy,” and that half of all creators also want affordable creator-centric events.
To build FiveTwoNine, Billion Dollar Boy put together an advisory group of six creators/creator brands, including:
(Descriptions provided by Billion Dollar Boy.)
“The Club’s creator-led Operations Council is crucial to meeting our vision for a healthier, more sustainable creator economy, ensuring it’s made by creators for creators with accessible pricing and real life, physical connections and a community at its core,” Becky Owen, Global Head of FiveTwoNine and Global CMO of Billion Dollar Boy, said in a statement.
“I feel so excited that I can use my expertise to be a founding member of FiveTwoNine,” Edwards said. “Education and guidance wasn’t there for me, but I want it to be there for other creators when they’re just starting out. It’s so daunting not knowing what an industry is going to give you and how you’re going to be viewed within an industry. You also have to wear many hats to be a creator. You’ve got to be your own everything: editor, producer, director, business owner. It’s about educating people on the hard side of it.”
The desire for collaborative, educational spaces for creators is certainly not new. That was the original idea behind YouTube Spaces, and when those were shuttered, it left a void in the creator economy. But, with FiveTwoNine, that void might be filling up. And there are other entrants, too: Late last year, influencer marketing company Whalar launched its own brick-and-mortar initiative called Lighthouse, which offers similar resources to FiveTwoNine.
Netflix has visited the farm once again. The streamer and Spotify have together poached Jay…
The creator supergroup that revived Supermarket Sweep on YouTube is ordering up another culinary competition.…
Meta is establishing paid subscription tiers across its network of social media platforms. A trio…
Microdramas are all grown up. A format that was virtually unknown outside of China a…
Paris Hilton has taken the fight against explicit deepfakes to TikTok. Her production company 11:11…
The creator economy is a $37 billion annual business, but that wealth is not split…