Instagram wants creators to make a sustainable living online - Here's how

Instagram Subscriber Programme
(Image credit: Twitter)

Instagram creators will now have the option of signing up to the 'Subscribers' programme through which they can charge their followers who wish to see their exclusive content. This was revealed recently by Adam Mosseri, Head of Instagram through a video post on microblogging site Twitter.

"We want Instagram to be the best place online for creators to make a living," said Adam Mosseri at the beginning of the video, indicating that the platform is moving toward other 'paid content' platforms.

"And a really important thing to creators everywhere," Mosseri continued, "is sustainable income, because at the end of the day, if you're a creator, you're a business. And a great way to establish some sustainable and predictable income is through subscriptions."

Instagram Subscribers

(Image credit: Twitter)

Creators who have signed up for the Subscribers programme will be able to collect a monthly fee from followers and will have a 'Subscriber home' tab on their profiles. By clicking the tab, followers can see exclusives and, obviously, sign up to be a subscriber.

In January, Instagram had introduced Subscriptions with support for Stories and Live video which can only be seen by paid followers. Back then, like now, Instagram had made available a badge next to the names of Subscribers who interacted with posts.

Sathish Shanmugam, Founder of Graphically a platform that helps creators with designs and ideas, welcomed this move and said that this new update offers creators a new way of making additional income

Coming to the present day, in addition, Reels and posts posted directly to subscribers will sport the 'Subscriber' badge and creators can also host exclusive chats, which can house up to 30 subscribers at a time, and interact with followers/fans.

As Mosseri puts it, "This is just one step on a much longer path to provide creators everywhere with a whole range of tools to be able to make a living online."

Suresh Subramaniam

Although on the younger side, Suresh, an engineer-turned journalist, has been around the field since smartphones had buttons in them. He has tried his hand at a variety of stuff, including writing articles for a Chennai-based eveninger on technology, automobiles, business and cricket at the beginning of his career. A Chennaiite can hardly escape cinema and Suresh has absorbed his fill of movies.