How to Get YouTube Sponsorships With Under 10,000 Subscribers
There is a myth in the YouTube world that refuses to die: the idea that you need tens of thousands of subscribers before any brand will pay you a penny. I have heard it from creators at every stage — “I need to hit 10K first,” “brands only work with big channels,” “nobody sponsors small YouTubers.” After 20+ years as a content creator, six Silver Play Buttons, and hundreds of consulting sessions with creators of every size, I can tell you with absolute certainty that this myth is wrong.
YouTube sponsorships for small channels are not only possible — they are increasingly common. Brands have wised up to the fact that micro-influencers with engaged, niche audiences often deliver better return on investment than mega-channels with millions of passive subscribers. The shift has been dramatic. When I was working on the vidIQ Creator Success team, I watched creators with 2,000 subscribers land four-figure sponsorship deals — because they understood something most small creators miss: it is not about how many people watch your videos, it is about who watches them.
In this guide, I am going to walk you through everything you need to know about landing YouTube sponsorships as a small channel. From why brands actually want to work with you, to building a media kit, pricing your deals, pitching brands, and delivering sponsored content that keeps your audience happy. This is the same framework I use with my consulting clients — and it works whether you have 500 subscribers or 50,000.
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Why Do Brands Sponsor Small YouTube Channels?
Brands sponsor small YouTube channels because niche audiences with high engagement deliver better marketing ROI than large audiences with low engagement. A channel with 3,000 subscribers in the home brewing niche is more valuable to a brewing equipment company than a general lifestyle channel with 300,000 subscribers — because every single viewer is a potential customer.
This is not guesswork. In my consulting work, I see the numbers behind these deals. Here is why the maths works in your favour as a small channel:
1. Higher Engagement Rates
Channels with fewer than 10,000 subscribers consistently show engagement rates two to three times higher than larger channels. Your viewers comment more, like more, and — critically — they actually watch your videos to the end. According to data from influencer marketing platforms, micro-influencer channels (1,000 to 10,000 subscribers) average engagement rates of 6-8%, compared to 2-3% for channels with 100,000+ subscribers. Brands care deeply about this because engagement translates directly into purchasing behaviour.
2. Lower Cost-Per-Impression
From a brand’s perspective, sponsoring a small channel is a high-value, low-risk proposition. They pay less for each impression, the audience is more targeted, and the creator is typically more flexible and enthusiastic about the partnership. A brand might pay a large creator £10,000 for a video that reaches 500,000 people (most of whom are not in the target market) — or they could sponsor ten small creators for £500 each and reach 50,000 people who are all genuinely interested in the product. Smart marketing teams choose the latter.
3. Trust and Authenticity
Small creators have something that big creators struggle to maintain: genuine trust with their audience. When you recommend a product to 3,000 engaged subscribers who feel like they know you personally, the conversion rate is dramatically higher than a scripted read on a massive channel. Brands are increasingly aware that authenticity drives sales, and small creators deliver authenticity at scale.
4. Niche Authority
If your channel covers a specific topic — budget photography, UK gardening, home lab networking, sourdough baking — you are an authority in that niche regardless of your subscriber count. Brands selling products in those niches want to reach your specific audience. They do not care that you have 4,000 subscribers instead of 400,000. They care that those 4,000 subscribers are exactly the people they want to sell to. Understanding your niche value is essential, and I have covered the strategic foundations of niche selection in my guide on building a 6-figure business around your YouTube channel.
How to Find YouTube Sponsors as a Small Channel
Finding sponsors is not about waiting for brands to discover you — that passive approach rarely works, especially for smaller channels. You need to be proactive. Here are the three most effective methods I recommend to my consulting clients:
Method 1: Sponsor Platforms and Marketplaces
Several platforms exist specifically to connect brands with creators. These are particularly useful for small channels because the platforms do the matchmaking for you based on your niche and audience demographics:
- Grin — An influencer marketing platform used by major brands. Create a profile, add your channel analytics, and brands can find and approach you directly. Grin is particularly strong for product-based brands in beauty, fashion, and lifestyle.
- AspireIQ (now Aspire) — One of the largest influencer platforms with a creator marketplace. You can browse available campaigns, apply to ones that fit your channel, and negotiate terms. They have a lower barrier to entry than many platforms, making them ideal for smaller creators.
- Channel Pages — Specifically designed for YouTube creators, Channel Pages lets you create a sponsorship profile that brands can browse. It includes automatic analytics syncing so your stats stay current without manual updates.
- Intellifluence — A marketplace that welcomes creators of all sizes, including micro-influencers. Brands post campaign briefs, and you apply to ones that match your channel.
- FameBit (now YouTube BrandConnect) — YouTube’s own platform for connecting creators with brands. While it historically had higher subscriber thresholds, the platform has expanded to include smaller creators in certain niches.
Key Takeaway: Sign up for at least three sponsor platforms simultaneously. Some platforms work better for certain niches, and having multiple profiles increases your visibility to brands. Treat each platform as a shop window — the more windows you are in, the more likely a buyer walks past.
Method 2: Direct Outreach to Brands
This is the most effective method for small channels. Here is how to identify the right brands to approach:
- Look at who sponsors similar channels — these brands have already proven they invest in YouTube marketing for your audience.
- Identify products you already use and mention. If you have naturally referenced a product in your videos, that brand is a perfect target — you can point to the organic mention as proof of enthusiasm.
- Search for brands running social media ads in your niche. Companies investing in social advertising are more likely to consider YouTube sponsorships.
- Check startup directories like Product Hunt. Newly funded startups often have marketing budget and are more open to smaller creators.
Method 3: Sponsor Marketplaces and Databases
Beyond dedicated platforms, marketplaces like Hashtag Paid (where brands post briefs and creators pitch ideas), Collabstr (where you set your own rates and brands book you directly), and Social Cat (focused specifically on micro-influencer partnerships) give you additional visibility to brands actively searching for creators.
Remember, sponsorships are just one piece of a diversified income strategy. My guide on 9 YouTube revenue streams beyond AdSense covers the full picture.
How to Create a YouTube Media Kit That Gets Results
A YouTube media kit is a professional document that showcases your channel’s value proposition, audience demographics, engagement metrics, and sponsorship offerings to potential brand partners. Think of it as your channel’s CV — it gives brands everything they need to decide whether you are a good fit for their campaign, without them having to dig through your analytics themselves.
Most small creators skip this step, which is a massive mistake. Walking into a sponsorship negotiation without a media kit is like walking into a job interview without a CV. It signals to brands that you are not professional, you are not prepared, and you have not thought about the value you bring to the table.
What to Include in Your Media Kit
Your media kit should be two to three pages long, visually clean, and packed with the data that brands actually care about. Here is exactly what to include:
Page 1: Channel Overview — Your name, channel name, niche description (be specific: “I help UK-based first-time home buyers navigate the property market” beats “I make property videos”), subscriber count (frame it positively), monthly views, average views per video (based on your last 10 uploads), and growth trend over 3-6 months.
Page 2: Audience Demographics and Engagement — Age and gender breakdown, geographic distribution (UK and US audiences are most valuable), average watch time, engagement rate (calculate as likes + comments / views x 100 — above 5% is excellent), and click-through rate.
Page 3: Content Examples and Pricing — Three to five of your best-performing videos with thumbnails and view counts, previous brand collaborations if any, your sponsorship packages and pricing, and a professional contact email.
For pulling accurate analytics data into your media kit, I recommend using vidIQ. It gives you detailed breakdowns of your audience demographics, engagement trends, and competitive positioning that go well beyond what YouTube Studio provides natively. When I was on the vidIQ team, we saw creators use these analytics to build media kits that genuinely impressed brands — because the data told a compelling story that raw subscriber counts never could.
How to Price Your First YouTube Sponsorship
Pricing is where most small creators either massively undercharge or accidentally price themselves out of deals. Neither is good. You need a rational pricing model that reflects your genuine value while remaining attractive to brands testing the waters with smaller creators.
There are three pricing models commonly used for YouTube sponsorships. For a deeper dive into setting your rates and negotiation tactics, see my complete guide on YouTube sponsorship rate cards and pricing brand deals.
Model 1: Cost Per View (CPV)
The CPV model charges brands based on the number of views your video is expected to receive. This is the most transparent pricing method and one I frequently recommend to new creators because it ties your rate directly to the value you deliver.
| Niche Category | CPV Rate (per 1,000 views) | Example (2,000 avg views) |
|---|---|---|
| General/Lifestyle | £15 – £25 | £30 – £50 |
| Gaming/Entertainment | £20 – £30 | £40 – £60 |
| Education/How-To | £25 – £40 | £50 – £80 |
| Technology/Software | £30 – £50 | £60 – £100 |
| Finance/Business | £40 – £60 | £80 – £120 |
| Health/Wellness | £30 – £50 | £60 – £100 |
How to calculate your rate: Take your average views per video (based on your last 10 uploads), divide by 1,000, then multiply by the CPV rate for your niche. If you average 3,000 views and you are in the technology niche, your starting rate is £90 to £150.
Model 2: Flat Rate
A flat rate charges a fixed price regardless of how many views the video receives. This model works well once you have a track record and your view counts are reasonably consistent. Flat rates are simpler for both parties and remove the uncertainty of performance-based pricing.
For small channels, flat rate packages typically look like this:
- 60-second mid-roll mention: £50 – £150
- Dedicated sponsor segment (2-3 minutes): £100 – £300
- Fully dedicated sponsored video: £200 – £600
- Video + social media bundle (YouTube + Instagram/Twitter): £300 – £800
Model 3: Hybrid Pricing
The hybrid model combines a base fee with a performance bonus — for example, £75 base plus £20 per 1,000 views above a threshold. This gives brands performance accountability whilst guaranteeing you a minimum payment.
Important: Never work for free. Even for your very first sponsorship, insist on at least some payment. If a brand offers only free product, counter with product plus a small fee. Working for free sets a precedent that is extremely difficult to reverse and devalues the entire small creator ecosystem. To understand how to negotiate effectively, read my post on YouTube brand deal negotiation.
Email Pitch Template for Reaching Out to Brands
Your outreach email is your first impression. It needs to be concise, professional, and focused entirely on what you can do for the brand — not what the brand can do for you. In my consulting sessions, I have helped creators craft hundreds of these pitches, and the ones that work share a specific structure.
Here is a proven template you can adapt:
Subject Line: Partnership Idea — [Your Channel Name] x [Brand Name]
Hi [Name],
I run [Channel Name], a YouTube channel focused on [your niche] with [subscriber count] subscribers and an average of [average views] views per video. My audience is primarily [key demographic — age, location, interests].
I have been using [Brand’s Product] for [time period] and genuinely rate it — I actually mentioned it in [link to video where you mentioned it, if applicable]. I would love to explore a paid partnership where I create a [type of content — review, tutorial, integration] featuring
for my audience.A few reasons this could work well for [Brand Name]:
– My audience engagement rate is [X]%, well above the YouTube average
– [X]% of my viewers are in [target geographic market]
– My videos average [X] minutes of watch time, meaning sponsor messages get full attention
I have attached my media kit with full analytics. I would love to have a quick chat about how we could work together.
Best,
[Your Name]
[Channel URL]
[Email]
Pitch Tips That Make the Difference
- Personalise every email. Mention the specific product. Generic mass emails get deleted instantly.
- Find the right contact on LinkedIn — marketing manager, influencer partnerships lead, or social media manager. Avoid generic contact forms.
- Lead with value, not need. Frame it as “I have an audience your brand would benefit from reaching,” never “I need a sponsor.”
- Keep it under 200 words. Marketing managers receive dozens of pitches daily.
- Follow up exactly once after 7-10 days. Persistence is good; pestering is not.
- Send 10-20 pitches per month. This is a numbers game, and consistent volume is what generates results.
How to Deliver a Great Sponsored Video (Without Alienating Your Audience)
Landing the sponsorship is only half the battle. How you deliver the sponsored content determines whether brands come back for repeat deals and whether your audience stays loyal. Get this wrong and you damage both relationships simultaneously. Get it right, and sponsorships become a sustainable, growing revenue stream.
Here are the principles I follow after two decades of creating sponsored content:
- Only promote products you genuinely believe in. I have turned down sponsorships worth thousands of pounds because the product was not something I could honestly endorse. Your audience’s trust is worth far more than any single deal.
- Be transparent about the sponsorship. Disclose clearly — use the paid promotion checkbox in YouTube Studio, give a verbal disclosure, and include it in your description. The YouTube Help Centre has detailed guidelines. Transparency actually increases conversions because viewers know you are being honest.
- Integrate naturally — do not read a script. The worst sponsored segments are the ones where the creator suddenly shifts tone and mechanically reads talking points. Instead, weave the sponsor into your content organically. If you are reviewing photography gear and the sponsor is a camera bag company, show the bag in use throughout the video.
- Maintain your production quality. A sponsored video should be at least as good as your regular content, ideally better. It lives on your channel forever and represents both you and the brand.
- Include honest opinions. If the product has a minor drawback, mention it. “This is fantastic, but I wish they offered a larger size” is far more credible than unqualified praise. If a brand demands only positive coverage with no honest critique, that is a red flag.
Building Your Channel for Sponsorship Success
While you are actively pursuing sponsorships, you should simultaneously be building your channel to make yourself increasingly attractive to brands. Here are the metrics and elements that matter most:
- Grow your subscriber base strategically. More subscribers means more leverage, but it must be an engaged audience aligned with your niche. If you are stuck at a subscriber plateau, addressing the root cause will help both your growth and sponsorship prospects. Use vidIQ to identify high-opportunity keywords, track growth metrics, and build professional-grade analytics for your media kit.
- Focus on engagement over raw numbers. A channel with 3,000 subscribers and a 7% engagement rate is more attractive to sponsors than a channel with 30,000 subscribers and a 1% rate. Respond to every comment, ask questions that prompt discussion, and build a genuine community.
- Develop a consistent brand identity. Consistent thumbnails, a recognisable style, regular uploads, and a clear niche. When a brand looks at your channel, they should immediately understand what you are about. Ambiguity kills sponsorship deals.
- Track everything for your media kit. Record your monthly views, engagement rates, demographics, and growth trends now. Three to six months of data showing consistent growth makes your media kit dramatically more compelling. Understanding how many subscribers you need to make money on YouTube helps set realistic milestones alongside your other revenue goals.
Common Mistakes Small Channels Make With Sponsorships
In my consulting work, I see the same sponsorship mistakes repeated by small channels over and over. Avoid these, and you will be ahead of 90% of creators at your level:
- Waiting for sponsors to come to you. Passive channels rarely get approached. You need to actively pitch.
- Accepting the first offer without negotiating. Brands expect negotiation. Their first offer is almost never their best.
- Not having a media kit ready. When a brand shows interest, you need to respond within hours. Have your kit prepared in advance.
- Promoting products outside your niche. A finance channel promoting a mobile game looks desperate. Only accept deals that serve your audience.
- Skipping written contracts. Even for small deals, insist on a written agreement covering deliverables, deadlines, and payment terms.
- Ignoring disclosure requirements. Non-disclosure can result in legal penalties and permanent trust damage. Always disclose clearly.
Step-by-Step Action Plan: Your First 30 Days
Here is the exact 30-day plan I walk my consulting clients through:
- Week 1 — Prepare your assets: Pull analytics from YouTube Studio and vidIQ, create your media kit, set up a professional email, and decide on your pricing model.
- Week 2 — Set up platforms: Sign up for three to five sponsor platforms, complete your profiles with accurate analytics, and apply to five campaigns that fit your channel.
- Week 3 — Start direct outreach: Research 20 brands that align with your niche, find the right contacts on LinkedIn, and send 10 personalised pitch emails.
- Week 4 — Follow up and refine: Follow up on unanswered pitches, send 10 new emails, check platforms for new opportunities, and refine your pitch based on responses.
Most of my consulting clients who commit to this volume of outreach land their first deal within three weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many subscribers do you need to get a YouTube sponsorship?
There is no minimum. Brands regularly sponsor channels with fewer than 1,000 subscribers if the audience is targeted and engaged. I have personally helped creators with under 500 subscribers land their first paid sponsorship. Niche relevance and engagement rate matter far more than raw numbers.
How much do YouTube sponsorships pay for small channels?
Small channels typically earn £15 to £50 per 1,000 views. A channel averaging 2,000 views might charge £50 to £150 for a dedicated sponsorship. Rates vary by niche — finance and tech command the highest rates. For a complete breakdown, see my YouTube sponsorship rate card guide.
What should I include in a YouTube media kit?
Include your channel overview, subscriber count and growth trend, average views per video, audience demographics (age, gender, location), engagement metrics, your best content examples, previous collaborations if any, and sponsorship pricing. Keep it to two or three pages and update monthly.
How do I find sponsors for my YouTube channel?
Three approaches: join sponsor platforms (Grin, AspireIQ, Channel Pages), reach out directly to brands whose products you use, and browse sponsor marketplaces. Direct outreach is most effective for small channels because you can demonstrate genuine enthusiasm and tailor your pitch.
Should I accept free products instead of paid sponsorships?
Free products can be a starting point for your first one or two deals, but transition to paid partnerships as quickly as possible. Even a small fee establishes that your channel has commercial value and sets a professional precedent for future negotiations.
How do I price my first YouTube sponsorship?
Use cost-per-view (CPV) as your baseline. Calculate your average views over your last 10 uploads, then multiply by £0.02 to £0.05 per view depending on niche. Leave room for negotiation and consider a slight introductory discount to build your portfolio.
Will sponsorships alienate my YouTube audience?
Not if you handle them correctly. Only promote products you believe in, be transparent, integrate naturally rather than reading scripts, and maintain production quality. Audiences dislike dishonest sponsorships, not sponsorships themselves.
Do I need to disclose YouTube sponsorships?
Yes. In the UK, the ASA requires clear disclosure. In the US, the FTC has similar rules. Tick the “paid promotion” box in YouTube Studio, give a verbal disclosure, and add it to your description. Failing to disclose can result in fines and reputation damage.
What niches attract the most YouTube sponsorships?
Technology, personal finance, health and fitness, beauty, gaming, education, and business attract the most demand. But virtually every niche has potential sponsors — the key is identifying brands that serve your specific audience.
How long does it take to get your first YouTube sponsorship?
Most creators who actively pitch land their first deal within one to three months. Sending 10 to 20 personalised pitches per month typically generates results within the first few weeks.
Ready to Take Your Channel to the Next Level?
Get the tools AND the expertise. Try vidIQ for data-driven growth, or book a 1-on-1 call with me for a personalised sponsorship strategy.
Final Thoughts
The biggest barrier to getting YouTube sponsorships is not your subscriber count — it is the belief that your subscriber count is a barrier. Brands want results, not vanity metrics. A small channel with a loyal, engaged, niche audience delivers results that many large channels simply cannot match.
In my 20+ years on the platform and through hundreds of consulting sessions, I have watched creators at every level build genuine sponsorship income. The ones who succeed share three traits: they prepare professionally (media kit, pricing, pitch), they outreach proactively (not waiting to be found), and they deliver excellent sponsored content that serves both the brand and their audience.
Sponsorships are just one part of a broader monetisation strategy. If you want to explore every revenue option available to you, my guide on YouTube revenue streams beyond AdSense covers all nine income channels you should be building alongside sponsorships.
Whether you use this guide to start landing deals on your own, leverage vidIQ to build a data-driven media kit, or book a consultation with me to develop a personalised sponsorship strategy — the most important thing is to start. Your first sponsorship is closer than you think.
About Alan Spicer
Alan Spicer is a YouTube Certified Expert and 20+ year content creator with 6 Silver Play Buttons. A former vidIQ team member and certified YouTube consultant, Alan has helped hundreds of creators and businesses grow their channels through expert audits, coaching, and data-driven strategy. Learn more about Alan’s services or book a free discovery call.
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