Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Startup helps social media personalit­ies make money

Fanhouse influencer­s provided a platform

- By Christian Hetrick

Before launching a tech startup in 2020, Rosie Nguyen and her co-founders experiment­ed on Twitter.

Ms. Nguyen, then a University of Pennsylvan­ia student, had amassed a substantia­l social media following by posting photos of herself, jokes about her sex life, video game commentary, and anything else on her mind. It was like an online public diary, she said.

But would fans pay to see her tweets from a private account?

It took just two weeks to find out: Ms. Nguyen said she earned $2,000 by making users send payments through Venmo and CashApp to gain access to her private Twitter feed. The experiment showed Ms. Nguyen and her cofounders that their startup idea was viable.

After graduating from the Wharton School with a bachelor’s degree in 2020, Ms. Nguyen co-founded Fanhouse, an online platform for creators and online influencer­s to put content behind a paywall. Users pay to see exclusive posts and chat directly with social media personalit­ies such as Ms. Nguyen.

The software app is also used by gamers, athletes, musicians and others with large audiences they can monetize through Fanhouse.

“I just want people to be able to make money doing what they love,” said Ms. Nguyen, 24, who now lives in Los Angeles. “I love creating, I love making people laugh, and for a very long time, that was all free. It doesn’t matter if my tweet got a million likes. I made no money for that.”

To be sure, some content creators have earned a lot of money, but mostly through advertisin­g. U.S. marketers are expected to spend more than $4 billion on influencer marketing this year, according to research from Insider Intelligen­ce. That includes payments made to influencer­s or their representa­tives for sponsored posts on social media or other user-generated content.

Fanhouse is offering creators another way to monetize their

posts more directly. Creators can charge a monthly subscripti­on fee, receive tips for their most popular posts, or get paid for specific requests, such as singing a particular song or creating custom artwork.

Fanhouse gets a 10% cut of each transactio­n.

“Fans of creators are rabid about their content, often watching a video the minute it is posted,” said Debra Williamson, a principal analyst at Insider Intelligen­ce who focuses on social media marketing and advertisin­g. “This sort of exclusive access has significan­t allure for those who follow creators closely.”

Still, not every creator will make money from subscripti­ons, Ms. Williamson said. Those with smaller followings may struggle to persuade their fans to pay a monthly fee. Ms. Williamson believes that most creators will continue to make the bulk of their earnings from sponsored posts and merchandis­e deals.

Since it was launched in November 2020, creators have collective­ly earned more than $ 6 million through Fanhouse, Ms. Nguyen said. The company, which has 12 full-time employees, has also raised $1.3 million. Investors include former Tinder executive Jeff Morris Jr. and Mantis VC, an early-stage tech investment firm formed by music duo the Chainsmoke­rs. Fanhouse is already profitable,

Ms. Nguyen said.

Fanhouse is in some ways a response to OnlyFans, an online content subscripti­on service that has become popular for sex workers. Last year, the Londonbase­d platform announced it would ban pornograph­y, citing pressure from banking partners. But OnlyFans reversed course after a backlash from users and sex workers.

Fanhouse bills itself as a “PG-13” platform and prohibits sexually explicit content. That allows the Los Angeles-based startup to work with major payment processors that charge lower fees and raise money from investors that have rules against porn. It also appeals to influencer­s who don’t want to be associated with sex work, Ms. Nguyen said.

Ms. Nguyen, who emigrated from Vietnam as a baby and grew up in Houston, turned to OnlyFans to make money during the early days of the pandemic. In March 2020, she lost her work-study job at the front desk of her Penn dorm when the university temporaril­y closed. That cut off a crucial part of her income that she sent home to support her family, she said.

OnlyFans allowed Ms. Nguyen to monetize her massive social media following, bringing in thousands of dollars a month. But it also attracted threats and sexual harassment. Followers pressured her to send nude photos, which she refused to do, or shamed her for being on

OnlyFans.

She shared the story of that lucrative but scary experience with her eventual co-founders: Khoi Le, the startup’s CEO, and Jerry Meng, the chief technology officer. The three of them came up with the idea of testing the Fanhouse concept by putting Ms. Nguyen’s Twitter behind the paywall. They were included in this year’s Forbes 30 Under 30 list because of Fanhouse’s early success.

Ms. Nguyen, who is chief marketing officer of Fanhouse, is also a creator on the platform, charging users $10 a month to see exclusive posts. On Fanhouse, she shares more photos and jokes, asks fans for feedback on potential Twitter posts, and gives followers insight into her life, such as when she was recently locked out of her apartment in the rain. “Please send help,” she joked.

“I think with anyone that develops a following, you’re saying something that no one else is saying,” Ms. Nguyen said. “I talk about my life, my sex life, things that not a lot of people will talk about, but in a very blunt, honest, and funny way. I think that just captured an audience.”

After working on the startup for a few months, she quit an investment banking job to focus on Fanhouse. “This is what I would want to do for the rest of my life,” she said of Fanhouse. “This is what is meaningful to me.”

 ?? ?? Rosie Nguyen
Rosie Nguyen

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