Chivas Regal, YMU Group and MTV Entertainment Group International are set to take center stage at this year’s Create London, joining a strengthened line-up that underscores how rapidly the creator economy is reshaping global content strategies. The three powerhouses-spanning premium spirits, talent management and international entertainment-will use the C21Media-backed event to spotlight new revenue models, brand-creator collaborations and emerging pathways for talent in an increasingly fragmented media landscape. Their participation signals a growing convergence between legacy brands, digital-native creators and conventional broadcasters as the fight for audience attention intensifies across platforms.
Chivas Regal and leading media brands converge at Create London to map the future of the creator economy
At the heart of this year’s Create London, premium whisky house Chivas Regal sits alongside powerhouse media brands to examine how talent, platforms and storytelling are being reshaped by a new wave of entrepreneurial creators. Brand strategists, showrunners and talent managers unpack how luxury partnerships, multi-platform IP and fan-first community building can fuel sustainable careers for digital-first talent. Sessions explore how creators can evolve from sponsored posts to owning long-term franchises,while media companies seek fresh ways to co-develop formats that travel across TV,streaming and social video.
Delegates gain a rare,behind-the-scenes look at how global players are aligning commercial strategy with creator-led authenticity. Conversations focus on:
- New brand-creator deal structures that balance reach, revenue and rights.
- Cross-border collaborations between talent, agencies and networks.
- Data-informed commissioning driven by short-form performance.
- IP ownership models that protect creators while scaling content.
| Key Focus | What It Means for Creators |
|---|---|
| Premium brand alliances | Longer-term funding and global visibility |
| Multi-platform storytelling | Content that travels from Reels to broadcast |
| Talent-first dealmaking | More control over narrative and IP |
| Audience analytics | Smarter format advancement and spin-offs |
Behind the deals how YMU Group and MTV Entertainment Group International are reshaping talent, IP and brand partnerships
While creators once relied on a patchwork of agents, broadcasters and ad-hoc brand deals, the collaboration between YMU Group and MTV Entertainment Group International is building a more integrated ecosystem where talent, IP and brands are developed in tandem from day one. Instead of pitching content after it’s made,they are co-designing formats and personalities with multi-platform extensions,data-led audience insights and clear commercial pathways baked in. This reframes talent not just as performers, but as co-owners of scalable IP that can live across streaming, social, live events and consumer products.
For brands eyeing the creator economy, this model means access to curated talent rosters, editorial-grade storytelling and distribution that stretches from linear TV to short-form social.Typical collaboration blueprints now include:
- 360° content franchises that blend long-form series, social cuts and live activations.
- Talent-led brand IP where creators front recurring formats,not one-off ads.
- Data-informed casting aligning audience segments with brand objectives.
- Flexible rights structures allowing revenue participation for both talent and partners.
| Pillar | What Changes | Brand Win |
|---|---|---|
| Talent | From endorsers to co-creators | Authentic voice and loyalty |
| IP | Built for cross-platform from inception | Longer lifespan, global reach |
| Partnerships | Strategic, not seasonal | Measurable impact and continuity |
Monetisation, measurement and scale practical playbooks for brands and creators in a fragmented attention market
As platforms splinter and viewing habits migrate from prime-time slots to perpetual scroll, brands and talent managers are experimenting with revenue mixes that go far beyond traditional sponsorships.Chivas Regal is testing hybrid models that blend shoppable storytelling, limited-edition drops and loyalty ecosystems, while YMU Group is building IP-first strategies where creators retain rights and participate in back-end upside from podcasts, live experiences and format sales. MTV Entertainment Group International, simultaneously occurring, is using its global network to incubate talent through short-form pilots that can scale into long-form, ad-funded or subscription-backed franchises. Together, these approaches favour flexible deal terms, shared data access and co-ownership of narrative worlds, rather than one-off paid posts.
Underpinning this shift is a more forensic approach to how attention is tracked and valued across feeds, streams and live events. Rather of chasing vanity metrics, decision-makers are weighting completion rates, save/share actions and community retention as lead indicators of commercial impact. That’s reshaping briefs, pricing and success criteria in ways that reward depth over reach and repeat engagement over fleeting virality:
- Value per minute of attention, not just CPMs
- Creator fit and brand safety validated with first-party data
- Multi-format storytelling (shorts, live, audio, IRL) from a single idea
- Audience pathways from finding content to owned channels and conversion
- Long-term partnerships with performance-based incentives for both sides
| Player | Monetisation Focus | Key Metric |
|---|---|---|
| Chivas Regal | Shoppable storytelling & limited drops | Basket size per campaign |
| YMU Group | Creator-owned IP & licensing | Lifetime value per creator |
| MTV Ent. Group Int’l | Format incubation across platforms | Spin-off and format export rate |
From campaigns to long term ecosystems recommendations for building sustainable creator led strategies in 2025 and beyond
As brands recalibrate their approach to the creator economy, the most forward-thinking players are shifting from bursty, one-off initiatives to always-on networks that treat creators as long-term collaborators rather than media inventory.That means building shared IP, nurturing communities over metrics, and giving talent a genuine seat at the strategic table. In practice, this calls for creator councils that inform brand direction, multi-year development deals that support experimentation, and audience-first storytelling that can move seamlessly across TikTok, YouTube, linear TV and live events. The result is a durable ecosystem where creators grow with the brand, and the brand in turn helps professionalise their businesses, from legal support and rights management to data access and creative development.
To make these ecosystems resilient through 2025 and beyond, companies like Chivas Regal, YMU Group and MTV Entertainment Group International are investing in infrastructure as much as content. That includes interoperable data stacks, clear revenue-sharing frameworks and cross-platform content labs designed to incubate new formats with low friction. The most effective strategies tend to prioritise:
- Consistency over virality – predictable publishing cadences and recurring formats.
- Shared ownership models – co-created IP where creators participate in upside.
- Audience mobility – incentives that move fans between platforms and touchpoints.
- Transparent governance – contracts, brand-safety rules and creative guidelines agreed upfront.
| Focus Area | 2025 Priority |
|---|---|
| Creator Relationships | Multi-year, co-owned IP deals |
| Measurement | Community health over single-post ROI |
| Content | Format franchises, not one-off stunts |
| Monetisation | Diversified revenue: ads, commerce, live |
To Conclude
As the creator economy continues to reshape the media landscape, the presence of Chivas Regal, YMU Group and MTV Entertainment Group International at Create London underlines just how central collaboration has become to this fast-evolving sector. Their participation not only signals the increasing alignment between brands, talent management and global entertainment platforms, but also highlights the breadth of chance now available to creators operating at every level.
By bringing these perspectives together on one stage, Create London offers a snapshot of where the industry is heading: toward deeper partnerships, more complex commercial models and a more global view of audience engagement. For producers,talent and executives alike,the conversations started here will help define the next phase of growth in the creator economy – and clarify who is best positioned to benefit from it.