Unilever now works with 300,000 creators across its portfolio, according to Digiday, and manages the scale by automating vetting and workflow routing while keeping creative control human. The company uses AI to check creator backgrounds, flag compliance risks, and route briefs to the right talent pools. Strategic decisions—which creators anchor a campaign, what the creative brief says, whether a partnership continues—remain with brand managers and agency teams.
The mechanics are straightforward. AI scans creator profiles for brand-safety issues, audience composition, past performance, and alignment with category guidelines. It sorts incoming creator applications by tier and routes approved talent into campaign queues. Contracts, usage rights, and payment triggers run through automated workflows. Humans approve the final roster, write the brief, and decide if the content ships. According to Digiday, Unilever's model keeps relationship management and creative judgment in human hands while offloading the mechanical work that bogs down programs at scale.
This works because creator programs fail at two points: the bottleneck of manual vetting when the network grows past a few hundred, and the creative drift when automation writes the briefs. Unilever solved the first without creating the second. Vetting 300,000 creators manually is impossible. Letting AI write creative direction produces bland, off-brand content that erodes performance. The hybrid model—machine for compliance, human for strategy—captures the efficiency without the creative cost. Brands that try to automate creative decisions see engagement rates fall because creators receive generic briefs that don't fit their voice or audience. Brands that vet manually cap out at a few thousand creators and miss the long-tail talent that drives authentic reach.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play on a modest budget. Start with a creator-management platform that offers AI vetting as a feature. Tools like Aspire, Cohley, and Roster offer tiered plans starting around $500 per month with automated screening for fake followers, brand-safety flags, and audience demographics. Set your compliance rules once: no controversial content in the past six months, minimum 5% engagement rate, audience match on age and location. Let the platform screen incoming applicants and surface a shortlist. You review the final 20 to 30 creators each month, approve them, and write a one-paragraph creative brief tailored to each. The platform handles contracts, tracking links, and payment. You keep the relationship and the creative control. Budget: $500 to $1,000 monthly for the platform, $50 to $200 per creator for product and fee, scalable to 50 creators a month without hiring.
The broader pattern is that scale and creativity are not opposed if you automate the mechanical layer and protect the strategic one. Unilever's model shows that a 300,000-creator network is manageable when humans do what humans do well—judge fit, write compelling briefs, build relationships—and machines do what machines do well—scan, sort, route, and enforce rules. Smaller brands adopting this hybrid approach avoid the trap of either manual overload or creative mediocrity, and they capture the long-tail creator economy without losing brand voice.
The takeaway
Automate vetting and workflow, keep humans on creative briefs and relationship calls.
The branded-identity layer Chiefs of Staff and heritage CMOs route through — your name imprinted on real authorized stock, your pick of 200+ brands and 70,000 products, shipped from one accountable house. Nine editorial desks publish the intelligence those operators read before they sign.
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