By the end of 2024, India’s influencer industry grew at a staggering 32%, touching nearly 4 million creators. Yet, behind the glitter of campaigns, reels, and brand collaborations lies a startling truth: only about 12–13% of creators earn more than Rs 50 lakh annually.
As someone who has been a founding member of a talent agency, I’ve watched this shift up close. The promise of content creation as a career has never been bigger, but neither has the gap between those who thrive and those who merely survive.
Here’s the Myth of Follower Count:
When brands, agencies, or even aspiring creators look at the space, there’s often one question: “How many followers do you have?”
But the harsh reality is that having 50,000 – 2,00,000 followers doesn’t guarantee financial stability anymore. I’ve seen creators with identical niches, similar view counts, and the same posting frequency, one making Rs 4 lakh a year, the other making Rs 50 lakh.
The difference is rarely about effort alone. It’s about who can consistently convert attention into influence, and influence into a brand.
Like any other industry, this one has its top 1%, its middle ladder, and its bottom funnel. Just being “decent” isn’t enough anymore. You either break through, or you remain in the crowded middle.
Unlike traditional jobs, content creation doesn’t come with a clear playbook. Every creator wakes up wearing five hats at once- a creative thinker, a scriptwriter, an editor, a business head, and a finance head.
The ones who scale do three things differently: Consistency despite fatigue – Top creators don’t wait for inspiration. They show up daily, often without breaks, because “leaves” don’t exist in this business.
Understanding the algorithm as much as the audience – Success isn’t just about creativity; it’s about reading platforms like a market analyst. The internet changes its mood every week, and only those who adapt quickly stay relevant.
Building beyond views – The best creators know how to move from being “popular” to being “profitable.” They diversify income streams, negotiate strategically, and build a personal brand that brands need to associate with.
The Unseen Costs of Content Creation:
What many underestimate is the mental and emotional cost of being a creator.
- It takes courage to put your face out there knowing your own friends or family might laugh behind your back.
- It takes resilience to spend hours on a piece of content that barely crosses four likes.
- It takes obsession to keep posting even when there are no campaigns, no brand deals, and no income for months.
And yet, even after the grind, creators face the brutal reality of replaceability. You may trend one week, only to be overshadowed by a new face the next. Unlike a corporate job, there’s no stability, just constant reinvention.
This is why it’s unfair to romanticize the creator economy as an easy career path. It is not a shortcut. It is self-employment, with all the risks and volatility of running a startup.
What This Means for Talent Agencies:
For talent agencies, this uneven landscape presents both challenges and opportunities.
- Curation over volume: With millions of creators out there, agencies must go beyond signing “anyone with followers.” The role of an agency today is to identify not just creators who can grow, but those who can sustain.
- Upskilling as much as representation: Agencies can no longer just “get deals.” They must actively help creators with strategy, positioning, monetization, and even financial literacy. The difference between a ₹4 lakh and a ₹50 lakh creator often lies in business skills, not talent.
- Mental health and longevity: Agencies that will thrive in the future are those that help creators treat this as a marathon, not a sprint. Burnout, inconsistency, and irrelevance are real threats support systems need to be part of representation.
In short, agencies must position themselves less as brokers and more as partners in building sustainable careers.
All in all. The Indian creator economy is booming, but like every booming industry, it is uneven. Only the top 12-13% are breaking through, while the majority are still fighting for visibility, relevance, and income.
This isn’t unique, it’s how every industry works. In music, acting, sports, or entrepreneurship, only a fraction make it to the top. Content creation is no different.
But for creators and agencies alike, the message is clear:
- Follower count is not a business model.
- Consistency is not optional.
- And building a sustainable personal brand is the only way to climb from the bottom to the top.
The space isn’t fair, but it is open. For those willing to treat it like a business, not just a hobby, there’s still room at the top.














