Creator Unit Math · unit economics for creators

What should a video or podcast sponsorship pay you?

A single "we'll pay you X" tells you nothing about whether it is a good deal. Enter your expected views or downloads, your CPM range (or a flat rate), the integration type and the share of the audience that actually sees it — and watch a three-scenario ladder build conservative, base and aggressive revenue side by side, each with its effective CPM, the floor you should ask for, and the delta against the offer on the table.

How much should a video or podcast sponsorship pay?

Start from the audience that actually sees the integration — your expected views or downloads multiplied by the share that does not skip, block or drop off — then multiply that reach (per thousand) by the CPM you can command and by a weight for the integration type, because a dedicated segment is worth more than a passing mention or a skippable pre-roll. That gives the estimated revenue for the deal. Because a CPM is a range, not a point, the planner shows three scenarios — conservative, base and aggressive — and reports your effective CPM (what you really earn per thousand promised views, after audience-seen and the weight discount it). The conservative scenario is your floor: the number you can defend as a realistic worst case, and therefore the price you should not accept less than.

Every figure on this page comes from the numbers you enter — this planner models your own deal and shows no benchmark or "typical YouTube / Twitch / podcast CPM" data, because those vary by niche, geography and season and there is no single official source for them.

Plan your sponsorship

Live recompute as you type — no submit button. Press Esc to reset the example.

Plan your sponsorship

Realistic views (video) or downloads (podcast) for the piece — not vanity totals.

How is your CPM set?

A range builds the ladder from your own low and high. A flat rate applies a transparent ± band you control.

The low end of the CPM you can command. Drives the conservative scenario.

The high end of the CPM you can command. Drives the aggressive scenario.

Integration type

Each type carries a weight on the CPM — a dedicated segment commands the full rate, a mention or pre-roll a fraction. Edit the weights below.

Edit integration weights

These are your editable defaults — your own read of what each format commands relative to a full dedicated segment (1.0). They are not benchmark figures.

Share of the audience that actually sees the integration after skips, ad-blockers and mid-roll drop-off.

The amount the sponsor has offered. Leave 0 to hide the delta column.

The starting values are an editable example, not market data. Replace them with your own deal's numbers.

Your revenue scenario ladder

Conservative, base and aggressive side by side — the base scenario is the most likely and is highlighted.

Conservative

$1,008

CPM used
$18
Effective CPM
$12.6
Vs the offer
Offer is $492 above

Base

Most likely

$1,484

CPM used
$26.5
Effective CPM
$18.55
Vs the offer
Offer is $16 above

Aggressive

$1,960

CPM used
$35
Effective CPM
$24.5
Vs the offer
Offer is $460 short

Floor to ask for

$1,008

Your conservative scenario — the realistic worst case, and the price you should not accept less than.

Audience reached: 56,000Integration weight: ×1

Take it into the negotiation

Export your three scenarios · $19 / €19

Download a PDF + CSV of this exact deal — the conservative, base and aggressive revenue, the effective CPM for each, and the floor to ask for — ready to put in front of the sponsor. One-time, no account.

Purchases handled by Lemon Squeezy (Merchant of Record).

Checkout is being finalised — the export will be available here shortly.

Estimate, not financial advice

This planner is an estimate to help you read a sponsorship's economics before you agree to it. It is not financial, tax or accounting advice, and it is not an adviser. The output is only as accurate as the views, CPM, weights and audience-seen share you enter, and it uses no benchmark or market-rate figures. Sense-check the result against your own past deals and analytics before deciding.

Last updated 2026-06-14Method reviewed 2026-06-14

How the math works

How the revenue per scenario is built

First the planner works out the audience that actually sees the integration: your expected views or downloads multiplied by the audience-seen share. That reach, divided by a thousand, is then multiplied by the CPM and by the integration weight to give the revenue: revenue = reach ÷ 1000 × CPM × weight. The audience-seen share matters because impressions that skip, block or drop off the mid-roll do not pay — counting only the audience that sees the integration is what keeps the number honest.

What the effective CPM tells you

The headline CPM is what you negotiate per thousand impressions. The effective CPM is what you really earn per thousand promised views, after the audience-seen share and the integration weight discount it: effective CPM = CPM × audience-seen share × weight. It is usually well below the headline, and it is the number to compare across deals — a high headline CPM on a format only half the audience sees can earn less than a lower CPM on a dedicated segment everyone watches.

Why three scenarios instead of one number

A CPM is a range, not a point, and views are an estimate, so a single figure hides the risk. When you enter a CPM range the ladder uses your low for the conservative scenario, the midpoint for the base, and your high for the aggressive — the spread is entirely your own range, with nothing invented. When you enter a flat rate the ladder applies a transparent ± band that you control (the scenario spread), so you still see a defensible downside and upside around your rate.

What the floor means

The floor is the conservative scenario's revenue: the number you can defend as a realistic worst case. It is the price you should not accept less than, because below it the deal is worse than your own cautious estimate. If the offer on the table is below the floor, that is the clearest signal to push back; if it sits between the floor and the base, you have room to negotiate toward the base.

Where the numbers come from

Everything shown is computed from your inputs, in your browser — nothing is sent to a server. This planner deliberately asserts no "typical CPM" for any platform: YouTube, Twitch and Spotify are named only as examples of where creators run sponsorships, never with invented numbers, because real CPMs vary by niche, geography and season and there is no single authoritative source for them. The CPM, the weights and the audience-seen share are all yours to set; the starting values in the form are an editable example to make the tool usable on first load, not a recommendation.

Frequently asked questions

How is the estimated revenue calculated?
The planner multiplies your expected views or downloads by the audience-seen share to get the reach that actually sees the integration, divides that by a thousand, then multiplies by the CPM and the integration weight. In short: revenue = reach ÷ 1000 × CPM × weight. Every input is yours.
What is the difference between the CPM and the effective CPM?
The CPM is the headline rate you negotiate per thousand impressions. The effective CPM is what you actually earn per thousand promised views once you account for the share of the audience that sees the integration and the weight of the integration type — effective CPM = CPM × audience-seen share × weight. It is the fairer number to compare deals on.
Why does the integration type change the result?
Because a dedicated segment, a brief mention and a skippable pre-roll do not command the same CPM. Each type carries a weight on the rate — a full dedicated segment is 1.0 by default, with a mention and a pre-roll at a fraction. The weights are your editable defaults, your own read of your formats, not market benchmarks; change them to match your experience.
What do the conservative, base and aggressive scenarios mean?
They are three points on your own uncertainty. With a CPM range, the conservative scenario uses your low, the base the midpoint and the aggressive your high. With a flat rate, the planner applies a transparent ± band you set around the rate. The base column is highlighted because it is the most likely outcome; the others show your realistic downside and upside.
Do you use any typical YouTube, Twitch or podcast CPMs?
No. Every figure on the page comes from the numbers you enter. Real sponsorship CPMs vary by niche, geography and season and there is no single official source for them, so the planner asserts none — inventing benchmark figures would be fabricated data. Those platforms are named only as examples of where sponsorships run, and the example values in the form are editable placeholders, not market data.
Is this financial advice?
No. It is an estimate to help you read a sponsorship's economics before you agree to it, and it is not an adviser. The output is only as accurate as the views, CPM, weights and audience-seen share you enter; sense-check it against your own past deals and analytics before deciding.