
Why There Is a Platform Fee in Creator Marketing (and What It Funds)
What the platform fee funds, what it is not, how it varies by plan, and how to calculate total budget—with transparency for brands and creators.
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Complete CPC guide: valid clicks, five-step campaigns, CPC vs flat fee, how to set rates, and benefits for brands and creators.
For many years, most creator campaigns followed the same model. A brand negotiated a flat fee per post, the creator produced content, and the campaign ended when the post went live.
While that model still makes sense in many contexts, it has an important limitation: it is hard to tie investment directly to results.
As companies seek more predictability and accountability, interest grows in performance-oriented models. That is the context for CPC (Cost Per Click).
Instead of measuring only published content, CPC measures the qualified traffic that content drives. At Pharoll, this model helps brands and creators work with clear goals, transparent metrics, and aligned incentives.
At a glance
CPC (Cost Per Click) is the amount paid per valid click attributed to a creator. Each creator receives an exclusive tracking link.
When a user clicks that link and the click meets campaign rules, it is recorded as a valid click. This measures each creator’s contribution consistently and transparently.
What matters is not post count but the impact those posts generate. See tracking and UTMs.
For a long time, creator marketing was judged mainly by:
These metrics remain useful for awareness campaigns. But when the goal is qualified traffic, leads, or sales, companies want indicators closer to business impact.
That is where CPC matters. Instead of “How many people saw the content?” you can ask “How many people took a measurable action?”
This brings creator marketing closer to paid search and social ads while keeping creators’ authenticity and credibility. Aligned with measurable creator marketing.
The process can be summarized in five steps.
Defines objective, budget, CPC rate, duration, campaign rules, and landing page. Structure with the brief.
Each creator knows upfront the CPC rate, available budget, campaign requirements, and validation criteria. Transparency reduces negotiation and speeds decisions.
Pharoll generates a unique tracking link per creator so every click is attributed correctly.
When a user clicks a creator’s link, the platform checks whether the click meets campaign rules. Only then is it counted.
Brands and creators monitor valid clicks, effective CPC, budget consumed, campaign progress, and per-creator performance. Use campaign analytics to optimize before the end.
Not every click represents genuine interest. Pharoll applies validation criteria defined per campaign.
Depending on context, factors may include legitimate traffic origin, cooldown period, active campaign, and compliance with established rules.
The goal is results that reflect relevant interactions—not volume alone. Details in click anti-fraud.
This is one of the most frequent questions. The answer depends on campaign objectives.
In practice, many brands use both models at different times. What matters is choosing the approach that fits campaign goals.
There is no universal value. Before setting CPC, consider:
In B2B campaigns, a higher CPC can be justified when it drives high-value commercial opportunities. Creators can negotiate CPC based on history and niche.
For brands, this model offers:
Instead of relying only on perceived impact, there is an objective basis to evaluate performance. The platform fee funds infrastructure—it is not deducted from creator CPC.
Creators benefit too. Knowing campaign terms upfront, they can decide whether to join and track performance transparently.
Creators who drive qualified traffic prove their value with concrete data, strengthening long-term brand relationships.
Click value should align with the outcome the brand expects.
More clicks do not always mean better results.
In performance campaigns, audience relevance often matters more than reach.
A CPC campaign should be optimized during execution—not analyzed only at the end.
Creator marketing will still include awareness, branding, and content production campaigns. But as companies demand more measurement, performance-oriented models grow more relevant.
CPC does not remove creativity or replace creator authenticity. It adds transparency so brands understand investment impact and creators prove value through measurable results.
At Pharoll we believe creator marketing can be managed with the same rigor as any digital acquisition channel—while keeping what makes it unique: trust between creators and their communities.
Brands: for brands · Creators: for creators · ROI.

What the platform fee funds, what it is not, how it varies by plan, and how to calculate total budget—with transparency for brands and creators.
Read article →How Pharoll ties each click to the right creator: tracking architecture, UTMs, the ?src= parameter, GA4 integration, and pre-launch checklist.
Read article →
Guide for creators: VALUE framework, negotiation prep, minimum rate, questions for brands, common mistakes, and checklist before accepting a proposal.
Read article →Illustrative implementation models, not customer results.

Energy seasonal campaign
Illustrative model for seasonal CPC campaigns—per-creator tracking, click validation, reporting, and data-driven renewal.
Valid clicks (example)
18.4k
Average CPC (example)
€0,82

B2B SaaS trial campaign
Illustrative B2B SaaS model—product creators, LTV-aligned CPC, trial attribution, and comparison with paid social.
Attributed trials (example)
640
Average CPC (example)
€1,15
Infrastructure for measurable creator marketing
Campaigns, tracking, analytics, and B2B discovery — without replacing your creative or media strategy.