Get Paid for Your YouTube Shorts: Ad Revenue Sharing for Creators Begins February 1st

Get Paid for Your YouTube Shorts: Ad Revenue Sharing for Creators Begins February 1st

With the launch of Shorts revenue sharing, YouTube announces the demise of its $100 million creator fund. However, the business anticipates that the majority of fund users will earn more via revenue sharing than they did through the fund. Because of the presence of music licencing, YouTube’s process for estimating how much each artist will get for their Shorts is tricky. As YouTube viewers watch Shorts, advertising will appear between videos on the Shorts Feed. The money earned by such adverts, according to YouTube, will be used to pay music licence providers and creators via a pooled pool that the business will divide at the end of each month. The amount of money allocated to the creator pool will be determined by the number of musical tracks used in the Shorts. If you post a video without music, all cash generated by that video will go to the creator pool. In the case of a Short with a single song, one-third of the money will be used to pay for licencing. Two-thirds of the budget for a Short with two tracks will go toward licencing.