March 2026 Roster Report
Aggregate metrics from the 12 active creators we managed in March.
March 2026 at a glance
All numbers verified and payment-processor-reconciled. See methodology →
Who we worked with
Twelve creators, broken down by earning tier, niche, and geography, anonymized at the individual level.
- $1K–$3K (3)3
- $3K–$5K (5)5
- $5K–$10K (3)3
- $10K+ (1)1
| Niche (top 5) | Creators |
|---|---|
| Fitness | 3 |
| Couples | 2 |
| Alt / Goth | 2 |
| Cosplay | 2 |
| BBW | 1 |
| Geography | Creators |
|---|---|
| United States | 5 |
| United Kingdom | 2 |
| Canada | 2 |
| EU | 2 |
| Australia | 1 |
We never publish individual creator data without explicit permission. Every figure here is an aggregate.
Revenue performance
Total roster revenue over the last six months, and where March's $342K came from.
- Subscriptions$189K · 55%
- PPV$97K · 28%
- Tips$34K · 10%
- Custom + other$22K · 7%
Growth + retention
How the roster moved this month, including the creator who went backwards.
What worked + what didn't
Win PPV laddering held up
The creators who kept a 3-tier PPV structure through the slower quarter outperformed the roster average by roughly 9 points of growth. We rolled the same structure out to two more pages mid-month and saw early lift.
Win Reddit clusters drove new subs
Four creators added or expanded Reddit promo. It was the single biggest new-subscriber source this month, ahead of Twitter for the first time across the roster.
Miss A TikTok push underdelivered
We invested operator hours into a coordinated TikTok content push for three creators. The attribution came back weak, under 4% of new subs traced to it. We're pausing the coordinated version and rethinking the funnel before spending more there.
Miss One creator declined
One page dropped 5% after a niche-repositioning test we pushed too fast. That was our call, not the creator's, and we're reverting it. It's the kind of thing most agencies would quietly leave out of a report.
Open question Is the PPV softening seasonal?
We still can't cleanly separate post-holiday seasonality from a real behavioral shift in PPV pricing. Next month's data should start to answer it; we'll report either way.
How we ran the agency
The operational side of the 50%, what the team actually did this month.
What clients said
"Best month I've had. The PPV ladder alone paid for the split.", Creator, $5–10K tier
"Honestly the niche test threw me off and my numbers dipped. They owned it and reverted fast.", Creator, $3–5K tier
"Reddit changed everything. Wish we'd started it two months earlier.", Creator, $1–3K tier
Roster NPS this month: 72 (11 of 12 responded)
What we learned
- Don't push niche-repositioning tests faster than a creator is comfortable with, the one page that dipped was an avoidable own-goal.
- New channels need an attribution plan before we spend operator hours, not after. The TikTok push taught us that the hard way.
- Rolling a proven structure (the PPV ladder) to more creators beats chasing a new tactic. We're standardizing it for onboarding.
- Review-call cadence slipped for two creators during onboarding week. We're adding a backup AM to protect the weekly rhythm.