I have a faceless page doing 3.5M monthly views with an 80% US/UK audience. I have never run a single brand promotion on it. Starting to wonder if I am leaving money on the table.
I run a faceless content page. Built it from zero to 15,500 followers and around 3.5 million views a month in about 3 months. Roughly 80 percent of the audience is Tier 1, mostly United States and United Kingdom, with the rest spread across Canada, Australia, and a few European countries. The page is monetized and earning.
Here is the part I keep going back and forth on.
I have never run a single brand deal or sponsored promotion on it. Not one. Every piece of content on the page so far has been pure organic content built around my niche. The page has never promoted a product, a service, or a brand in its entire run.
Part of me likes that the feed is clean and the audience trusts it completely because nothing has ever felt like an ad. The engagement stays high partly because people know the content is genuine.
But the other part of me looks at the numbers. 3.5 million monthly views. A predominantly US and UK audience, which is the exact demographic most brands pay premium rates to reach. And I am currently earning only from platform monetization while that entire audience sits there having never seen a single sponsored placement. It feels like I might be sitting on something I am underusing.
For people here who have worked with creators or run influencer campaigns, a few honest questions. Is a clean page that has never run promotions actually more valuable to a brand, or does the lack of any sponsored track record make brands hesitant to be the first?
For a page this size with a heavily Tier 1 audience, what does a fair brand deal even look like right now? I genuinely have no benchmark because I have never done one. And does keeping a page promotion-free for too long cost you more than it protects, or is the trust premium worth holding out for the right partner?
I would rather hear from people who actually do this than guess my way into pricing it wrong or partnering with the wrong brand early.
open to any perspective.