An adult creator media kit is the short, polished business page or PDF that explains who you are, what audience you reach, where your official links live, and what kinds of collaborations you will consider. It is not a résumé, and it is definitely not a place to share private content. Think of it as a brand-safe snapshot that helps sponsors, photographers, podcasts, studios, clip editors, and other creators understand whether a partnership makes sense.
For adult creators, a media kit has one extra job: it should make your boundaries clear while still presenting your work professionally. The right kit can reduce awkward back-and-forth, filter out bad-fit inquiries, and give serious partners enough information to start a respectful conversation.
Quick Answer: What Should an Adult Creator Media Kit Include?
- A short creator bio with your niche, tone, and public-facing brand.
- Verified official links, including your website, fan platforms, social pages, and creator discovery profiles.
- Audience and engagement stats from platforms where you are comfortable sharing metrics.
- Collaboration options, deliverables, starting rates, and what is not available.
- Brand-safety notes, disclosure practices, age/consent boundaries, and contact rules.
- A few non-explicit visuals, press-safe screenshots, or sample post formats.
The goal is not to overshare. The goal is to make legitimate opportunities easier to evaluate.
Why Adult Creators Need a Media Kit
A media kit helps you move from casual DMs to cleaner business conversations. Instead of answering the same questions every time, you can send one link that covers the basics: audience fit, available collaboration formats, content boundaries, and the best way to contact you.
That matters because adult creator work often sits across several platforms at once. A creator might have a subscription page, short-form social accounts, a link hub, a livestreaming presence, a newsletter, and a discovery profile. Without a simple business summary, potential partners may not know which links are official or which opportunities are appropriate.
A good media kit also protects your time. If a brand wants content you do not offer, asks for private access, ignores disclosure rules, or pushes past your stated boundaries, your kit gives you a professional reason to decline quickly.
1. Start With a Clear Creator Positioning Statement
Open with two or three sentences that explain your public creator brand. Keep it factual and non-explicit. A strong positioning statement covers:
- Your creator category or niche in broad terms.
- Your content style, such as educational, playful, fitness-focused, glamour, cosplay, behind-the-scenes, or lifestyle.
- The audience you serve, without exposing private fan information.
- What makes your page useful for brands or collaborators.
Example: “I’m an independent adult creator focused on glamour, lifestyle, and fan community content for consenting adults. My audience follows me for polished visuals, direct fan engagement, and practical behind-the-scenes updates across subscription and social platforms.”
You do not need to list every platform in the first paragraph. Save the detailed links for a dedicated section so the kit stays easy to scan.
2. Add Official Links and Profile Verification
Adult creator impersonation is common enough that link clarity matters. Your media kit should include your official website, public social profiles, subscription or fan platforms, booking/contact form, and any creator discovery profile you actively maintain.
This is a natural place to use Fanclan as part of your public link organization. If fans or partners are trying to confirm they found the right adult creator, a clean profile with official links, tags, and social pages can reduce confusion and keep people away from fake accounts.
Keep the link section tidy. Use labels like “Official Website,” “Subscription Platform,” “Creator Discovery Profile,” “Business Email,” and “Press/Collab Inquiry Form.” Avoid sending business partners through a messy chain of temporary links if you can give them a stable destination.
3. Share Audience Stats Without Compromising Privacy
Brands and collaborators care about audience fit, but you do not need to reveal sensitive data. Share high-level, aggregated metrics only. Useful stats can include:
- Follower counts on public social platforms.
- Average reach or views for recent posts, if the platform provides it.
- Engagement rate ranges, such as comments, saves, replies, or clicks.
- Top audience regions in broad terms, like country or region.
- Audience interests that relate to safe collaboration categories.
Do not include fan usernames, subscriber lists, private messages, payment screenshots, or anything that could identify individual fans. Privacy-conscious creators look more professional, not less. If a partner asks for private audience data, treat that as a red flag.
If your numbers vary by platform, say so. For example: “Short-form posts perform best for reach; subscription posts perform best for direct fan engagement.” This is more useful than one inflated number with no context.
4. List Collaboration Formats You Actually Offer
Your media kit should make it obvious what a legitimate partner can ask for. Adult creators often receive vague pitches, so define the formats that fit your brand before people approach you.
Common public-safe collaboration options include:
- Sponsored social posts or story mentions, where allowed by platform rules.
- Newsletter placements or creator updates.
- Podcast, interview, or livestream appearances.
- Non-explicit product reviews, unboxings, or lifestyle integrations.
- Affiliate or referral campaigns, clearly disclosed when applicable.
- Creator-to-creator collaborations, shoutouts, or cross-promotions.
- Photography, editing, styling, coaching, or consulting services.
Be equally clear about what you do not offer. If you do not accept explicit custom requests, unpaid “exposure” collaborations, surprise content requirements, or off-platform payments, say that plainly. Boundaries are part of the business information.
5. Include a Simple Rate Card or Starting Price Ranges
A rate card does not have to lock you into every price forever. It can show starting ranges, minimum budgets, or “available on request” notes for custom campaigns. The point is to prevent serious mismatches.
For adult creators, rates may depend on platform restrictions, usage rights, exclusivity, production time, privacy requirements, and whether the brand wants whitelisting or paid ad usage. Separate the deliverable from the rights. A one-time organic post is different from a brand using your image in ads for six months.
A simple structure might include:
- Sponsored story or short-form mention: starting rate.
- Dedicated feed post or video: starting rate.
- Newsletter placement: starting rate.
- Interview or livestream appearance: starting rate.
- Usage rights, exclusivity, rush delivery, or revisions: quoted separately.
If you are not ready to publish exact prices, include “minimum campaign budget” or “rates depend on scope, platform, usage rights, and timeline.” That still signals that you run your creator work like a business.
6. Add Brand-Safety and Disclosure Notes
Brand safety does not mean pretending you are not an adult creator. It means explaining the standards you follow so partners know what to expect. Include a short section covering legal adult content, consent, platform compliance, and sponsored-content disclosure.
The FTC’s Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers says that endorsements should be clearly disclosed when there is a material connection between the creator and a brand. The FTC also maintains broader guidance on endorsements, influencers, and reviews. If you work with sponsors, your media kit should show that you understand disclosure expectations.
If you publish on mainstream platforms, mention that all campaigns must comply with platform rules. For example, YouTube provides guidance on paid product placements, sponsorships, and endorsements, and Instagram’s Help Center includes branded-content and paid partnership guidance. You do not need to turn the kit into a legal memo; a short compliance note is enough.
7. Use Non-Explicit Visual Samples
Your media kit is usually sent to people who are deciding whether to work with you, not paying subscribers. Keep visuals non-explicit, tasteful, and safe to open in a workplace setting. Use headshots, lifestyle images, branded graphics, blurred profile screenshots, content thumbnails without nudity, or sample layouts that show your style without sharing premium material.
If you use platform screenshots, crop carefully. Remove private fan messages, earnings, subscriber names, unreleased content, and admin dashboards. A creator media kit should never expose data that fans trusted you to keep private.
Good visuals answer simple business questions: What is your aesthetic? Do you present yourself consistently? Can a sponsor imagine the final placement? They do not need to reveal anything private to do that.
8. Explain Your Contact Process
A media kit should end with a clear contact path. Use a business email, inquiry form, or booking link rather than asking partners to DM you across multiple platforms. Include what information you need in the first message:
- Brand or collaborator name.
- Campaign goal and product category.
- Requested deliverables and platforms.
- Timeline and launch date.
- Budget or rate expectations.
- Usage rights, exclusivity, and disclosure requirements.
This saves time and filters low-effort pitches. You can also state that you do not respond to requests for private fan information, leaked content, paywall bypasses, or anything involving non-consensual material.
Adult Creator Media Kit Checklist
Before you send your kit, review it like a partner would:
- Is the first screen clear about who you are and what you offer?
- Are your official links current and easy to verify?
- Are your audience stats recent, aggregated, and privacy-safe?
- Are collaboration formats and boundaries easy to understand?
- Are rates or budget ranges clear enough to prevent bad-fit pitches?
- Are sponsored-content disclosures and platform-compliance notes included?
- Are all visuals non-explicit and safe for public business review?
- Is there one preferred business contact method?
If you already optimized your public profiles, connect the kit to that work. For example, a stronger profile bio and link structure can support your kit; see Fanclan’s guide to adult creator profile SEO. If you want to show partners that you publish consistently, pair the kit with a simple planning system like an adult creator content calendar.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Making the kit too explicit
Partners need to understand your public brand, not see private content. Keep the kit business-friendly and save premium material for the platforms where it belongs.
Sharing fan or subscriber data
Aggregated metrics are useful. Identifiable fan data is not. Protecting fan privacy is part of creator professionalism.
Using vague collaboration language
“Open to collabs” is not enough. Say what kinds of deliverables, platforms, and categories you will consider.
Forgetting usage rights
If a brand wants to reuse your image, run paid ads, or keep content live beyond the original post, that should be negotiated separately.
Hiding adult-content boundaries
Clear boundaries help good partners respect your work and help you decline bad-fit requests faster.
FAQ
Should an adult creator media kit be a PDF or a web page?
Either can work. A PDF is easy to attach, but a private or public web page is easier to update. Many creators use both: a short web page for current links and a PDF for formal pitches.
Do I need huge follower numbers to make a media kit?
No. A media kit is useful even for smaller creators if your audience is engaged and your collaboration rules are clear. Niche fit, trust, and consistency can matter more than raw follower count.
Should I list exact rates?
List exact rates if you are comfortable. If not, use starting ranges, minimum budgets, or “quoted by scope.” Always separate content creation from usage rights and exclusivity.
Can I include adult platform links?
Yes, if they are your official public links and the kit is intended for adult-community business contacts. Keep the descriptions factual and avoid explicit preview content.
How often should I update my media kit?
Review it monthly or after meaningful platform changes. Outdated stats, broken links, or old visuals make it harder for partners to trust the information.
Conclusion
An adult creator media kit is a simple business tool: it shows your brand, your audience, your official links, your collaboration options, and your boundaries. Keep it polished, non-explicit, privacy-conscious, and easy to update. The best kit does not pressure every visitor to work with you; it helps the right people understand how to approach you respectfully.
If your links are spread across several platforms, a Fanclan profile can help fans and partners find your official creator pages in one place. Use it as part of a cleaner public footprint, then let your media kit handle the business conversation.