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Portada: The Creator Economy M&A Boom: 2025’s Biggest Deals and What’s Driving Them

The Creator Economy M&A Boom: 2025’s Biggest Deals and What’s Driving Them

By Alberto Luengo|07/22/25
creator economycontent creationanalyticsbrand strategyai editingautomationinfluencer
Mergers and acquisitions in the creator economy have hit record highs in 2025, reshaping platforms, monetization, and the future of content infrastructure.

With 52 deals closed in six months and over $250B in creator-driven value, M&A activity is flooding platforms, SaaS tools, and influencer networks. Here's an in-depth look at the biggest transactions, regional patterns, valuation trends, and what this consolidation wave means for the industry.


A Breakneck Pace: 52 Deals in 6 Months

This isn’t hype—it’s a reckoning. In H1 2025 alone, 52 creator-economy deals closed—a 73% YoY jump from the 30 deals in H1 2024. That volume already eclipses full-year performance in previous cycles.
Valuations are surging alongside activity: the creator economy is now estimated at over $250 billion, with ad, subscription, and collaboration revenues fueling institutional interest.


The Flagships of the Boom

Uscreen & PSG Equity – $150M

A true breakout moment: PSG Equity’s $150 million growth investment in Uscreen signals that platforms enabling creators to build subscription-based apps are now a coveted category. Uscreen’s CEO PJ Taei noted its creators have pulled in over $600 million via subscriptions since 2015—a clear sign this infrastructure is fertile ground.

Later Acquires Mavely – $250M

Later’s pivot into affiliate commerce shows the creator stack’s breadth. With Summits-backed capital, Later bet $250M on Mavely to own the entire weave from content to commerce.

Publicis Groupe’s Social Play

From Influential ($500M, 2024) to Captiv8 and BR Media Group (~$275M early 2025), Publicis is doubling down on influencer infrastructure—signaling ad agencies are determined to internalize creator-led content.


Who’s Buying—and Where the Money’s Flowing

The orchestrators behind the deals paint a clear picture:

Buyer TypeShare of Deals
Private Equity61%
Media/Ad Conglom.~20%
Tech/Platform FirmsRemainder

Regional patterns reflect center-stage dominance:

  • 79% of H1 deals involved North American targets.
  • Europe: ~17%; Asia, LATAM, MENA: ~4%.
    Expect APAC and LATAM to reemerge in H2 as acquisition dynamics evolve.

Sector Spread and Valuations

From Quartermast and NetInfluencer data:

  • Software/tools (editing, scheduling, analytics): 27% of deals
  • Media/Publishers: 19%
  • Agencies & Talent: 13.5% each
  • Audio, Commerce, Gaming: mid-single digits

Typical multiples:

  • Media: ~11.6× EBITDA
  • SaaS: ~6.7× ARR
  • Agencies/Talent: ~6× EBITDA

These are not fluff figures—they signal real value anchored in subscription revenues, recurring contracts, and community retention.


What’s Driving the Frenzy

  1. Platform Infrastructure
    Creators want control and flexibility. Tools like Uscreen deliver sovereignty—own your apps, audiences, and data. Acquisition allows firms to integrate creator pipelines without starting from scratch.

  2. Agencies Want Full Funnels
    Brands require seamless campaign management. No more disparate SaaS stacks—one login, one dashboard, one analytics endpoint.

  3. Content is Currency
    Companies like Publicis and Fox see creators as the new storytelling channel. Buying in is faster and more scalable than building creator departments internally.


Narrative Beat: Not a Bubble, But a Clear Market Shift

This isn’t just investment hype. A slow pullback in VC between 2022-24 reset expectations—VC funding dropped from $8B to $2B. What we’re now seeing is smart capital, with strong unit economics and genuine SaaS traction, being rewarded with acquisition premiums.


On the Horizon: H2 2025 Outlook

  • Deal count to pass 100 by year-end
  • Global expansion: expect more APAC, LATAM, EMEA targets
  • Cross-sector interest: CPG, foodtech, retail moving into creator platforms
  • Talent consolidation: influencer management firms and boutique agencies likely targets

What It Means (Fact-Only)

  • Tools you use may soon be part of larger ecosystems—powerful, but possibly more gated.
  • Platform features are likely to accelerate post-deal—AI analytics, cross-platform dashboards, bundled workflows.
  • As the space matures, expect more formal structures around content monetization, creator compensation, and compliance.

Rkive’s Long Game

We’re here for the long haul. We aim to acquire where it makes sense, grow where it matters, and integrate deeply—but without losing focus on creator autonomy. Our road ahead: more automation, stronger analytics, tighter platform integration—but never dependency on still-more deals.


Takeaways in three sentences

  1. We’re seeing real-side, high-value consolidation in creator infrastructure—no hype, just market economics.
  2. North America is driving—but global expansion is inevitable soon.
  3. Rkive stays independent by design, while actively exploring selective acquisitions that deliver real ecosystem value.

Sources


About the author

Alberto Luengo is the founder and CEO of Rkive AI, a leading expert in AI for content automation and growth. He shares real-world insights on technology, strategy, and the future of the creator economy.