Apr 10, 2026
8 MIN READ
Templates & Resources
Templates & Resources
Influencer Marketing Spreadsheet Templates: The Free Guide (+ When You've Actually Outgrown Them)
Influencer Marketing Spreadsheet Templates: The Free Guide (+ When You've Actually Outgrown Them)
Influencer Marketing Spreadsheet Templates: The Free Guide (+ When You've Actually Outgrown Them)

Sections
Blog in Short ⏱️
Blog in Short ⏱️
A quick glance at the highlights—perfect for when you're short on time.
A quick glance at the highlights—perfect for when you're short on time.
Spreadsheets are the starting point for almost every influencer marketing program. They are flexible, free, and work well when you are managing a small number of creators. But as campaigns grow, they quickly turn into a bottleneck.
Here’s what this guide covers:
• 5 essential templates: discovery, outreach, campaign tracking, content calendar, and ROI
• What metrics actually matter beyond likes and impressions
• How to structure your workflow across multiple campaigns
• The biggest mistakes brands make with spreadsheet tracking
• Clear signs you have outgrown spreadsheets and need a better system
👉 Use spreadsheets to start, but don’t let them slow you down as you scale.
Every influencer marketer uses spreadsheets. Even the ones with dedicated platforms. Even the ones who swear they've moved past them.
There's a reason for that; spreadsheets are free, infinitely flexible, shareable with anyone, and require zero onboarding. When you're managing five creator relationships, a well-built Google Sheet does the job just fine.
But there's also a point where spreadsheets stop being a tool and start being a bottleneck. You miss a post going live. You lose track of which creator got which promo code. You spend Friday morning manually pulling metrics from four different platforms into a master doc that's already three days out of date.
This guide gives you both things: the actual templates worth using, built around what influencer marketers actually track and an honest look at the signals that tell you you've outgrown them.
👉 Grab the free template pack here (Google Sheets — no email required, just make a copy)
What's in the Template Pack
The pack includes five separate sheets, each covering a distinct part of the influencer marketing workflow. You can use them individually or keep them in one connected workbook, depending on how your program is structured.
Creator Discovery & Vetting Tracker for building and qualifying your outreach list
Outreach & Pipeline Tracker for managing the full collaboration lifecycle from first contact to signed
Campaign Performance Tracker for measuring results per creator and per campaign
Content Calendar & Deliverables Tracker for managing what's due, what's approved, and what's live
ROI & Budget Tracker for tracking spend vs. results and making the case internally
Let's walk through each one.
Sheet 1: Creator Discovery and Vetting Tracker
This is where most influencer programs start and where most spreadsheets are first built from scratch, badly, under time pressure.
The discovery tracker exists to answer one question before you reach out to anyone: is this creator actually worth pursuing? It's where you capture the raw data you need to make that call quickly without going back to check profiles three times.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | Full name and handle |
Platform | Instagram / TikTok / YouTube |
Follower count | At time of review |
Engagement rate | Likes + comments / followers × 100 |
Engagement rate vs. benchmark | Is their rate above or below average for their tier? |
Audience location (%) | % of audience in your target market |
Audience age range | Does it match your customer profile? |
Fake follower estimate (%) | Flag above 20% |
Niche/content type | What do they primarily post about? |
Previous brand collabs | Have they worked with competitors? |
Vetting status | Pass / Review / Reject |
Notes | Anything that stood out — good or bad |
How to use it:
Build this list before you start outreach. The goal is to get to a shortlist of creators where every row has passed a minimum threshold across engagement rate, audience location, and fake follower percentage. Anyone who doesn't pass basic vetting should be marked Reject before you spend time on outreach.
The columns that most brands skip and shouldn't are audience location and fake follower estimate. A creator with 100K followers and 4% engagement looks great until you check that 70% of their audience is in a market you don't serve. Add those columns from the start.
Also Read: The Complete Influencer Vetting Checklist: Things to Check Before You Partner
Sheet 2: Outreach and Pipeline Tracker
Once you have a vetting shortlist, you need to track where each creator is in the relationship lifecycle. The outreach tracker is essentially a lightweight CRM, not as powerful as a dedicated tool, but enough to prevent the thing that kills most small programs: losing track of who you've contacted, when, and what happened.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name + handle | |
Email / DM contact | Where you're reaching out |
Outreach date | When you first contacted them |
Follow-up 1 date | |
Follow-up 2 date | |
Response received | Yes / No |
Response date | |
Current status | Outreached / Interested / Negotiating / Confirmed / Declined / Ghosted |
Agreed fee | |
Product sent | Yes / No + date |
Contract signed | Yes / No |
Notes | Any context from conversations |
How to use it:
The status column is the most important one. Keep it updated after every interaction and filter by status before each work session. "Ghosted" is a valid status. Don't keep following up with someone who hasn't responded after four touches. "Negotiating" means you need to take action. "Confirmed" means move to the campaign tracker.
Color coding the status column by stage (yellow for in-progress, green for confirmed, grey for closed/declined) makes it much faster to read at a glance. Add that conditional formatting when you set it up.
Sheet 3: Campaign Performance Tracker
This is the sheet most brands should have but often build wrong. The most common mistake: tracking the metrics that are easy to pull (impressions, likes) rather than the ones that tell you whether the campaign actually worked.
The goal of this sheet is to give you a per-creator view of performance that you can compare across your program so you can see who's worth renewing and who isn't.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Campaign name | |
Platform | |
Content format | Reel / Story / TikTok / YouTube / etc. |
Post date | |
Link to content | |
Reach / Impressions | |
Likes | |
Comments | |
Shares / Saves | |
Engagement rate (actual) | Engagements / Reach × 100 |
Clicks / Link clicks | |
Promo code redemptions | |
Revenue attributed | If trackable |
Fee paid | |
CPM | Fee / (Impressions / 1000) |
Cost per engagement | Fee / total engagements |
Notes | Anything notable about performance |
The metrics that actually matter:
Impressions tell you how many times the content was served. Engagement rate tells you whether anyone cared. Promo code redemptions and revenue attributed tell you whether anyone bought. For most campaigns, the hierarchy should be: revenue > code redemptions > engagement rate > impressions. Build your tracker in that priority order, not the other way around.
CPM and cost per engagement are the numbers that let you compare campaigns across creators of different sizes — a macro creator might have lower engagement rate but better CPM than a nano creator. Without those normalizing metrics, you're comparing apples and oranges.
Sheet 4: Content Calendar and Deliverables Tracker
Managing deliverables across multiple creators is where spreadsheet programs most often break down — but a well-structured content calendar can hold it together for a while.
This sheet answers a simple question at any given moment: what's due, what's approved, what's live, and what's late?
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Platform | |
Deliverable type | Story / Reel / TikTok / YouTube / etc. |
Brief sent date | |
Draft due date | |
Draft received | Yes / No |
Feedback sent | Yes / No + date |
Revision due | |
Approved | Yes / No |
Go-live date (agreed) | |
Actual live date | |
Link to live content | |
Status | Draft pending / Under review / Approved / Live / Late |
How to use it:
Sort by go-live date and review weekly. Anything where the actual live date is blank and the agreed go-live date has passed needs immediate follow-up. Anything in "Under review" that's been sitting for more than 48 hours needs to be actioned on your end.
The "Brief sent date" column matters more than most teams realize. If a creator posts late, the first question is when you sent the brief. A brief sent with five days' notice produces worse content and lower compliance rates than one sent two weeks out. Tracking this over time shows you whether your operational process is contributing to delays.
Sheet 5: ROI and Budget Tracker
This is the sheet you need when someone above you asks "what are we actually getting from influencer marketing?" It consolidates spend and results across your whole program into a format you can present.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Campaign | |
Fee paid | |
Product value sent | If gifting — include cost |
Total investment | Fee + product value |
Reach delivered | |
Engagements delivered | |
Clicks / visits | |
Promo code redemptions | |
Revenue attributed | |
Estimated media value | Optional — use your CPM benchmark |
ROI | Revenue / Total investment |
Notes |
At the bottom of this sheet, include a summary row:
Total investment across all creators
Total revenue attributed
Overall program ROI
Average CPM across the program
Average cost per engagement
This is the number your CMO or founder wants to see. A well-maintained ROI tracker means you can pull it at any time rather than spending a day before a quarterly review reconstructing what you spent and what it produced.
How to Use All Five Sheets Together
These sheets work as a connected system, not five separate documents. The flow is:
Discovery tracker → Outreach tracker → Campaign tracker + Content calendar → ROI tracker
A creator moves from a row in your discovery tracker (vetted, status: Pass) to your outreach tracker (status: Outreached) to your campaign tracker and content calendar once confirmed, and finally their results feed into the ROI tracker.
When you're setting this up, the most important thing is to commit to updating it consistently. A spreadsheet that's accurate is useful. A spreadsheet that's three weeks out of date is a liability — it creates false confidence and causes you to miss things.
Pick a cadence: quick daily status updates (5 minutes), a weekly performance pull (20–30 minutes), and a monthly ROI summary. That's enough to keep five sheets accurate without it becoming a part-time job.
Signs When Spreadsheets Stop Working
Here's the honest part of this guide.
Spreadsheets work well up to a point. That point is different for every team, but there are specific signals that tell you you've crossed it. If you recognize more than two or three of these, your spreadsheet is costing you more time than it's saving.
Signal 1: You're manually updating metrics after every campaign.
Every time a campaign ends, someone on your team opens the performance tracker and manually inputs reach, engagement, clicks, and revenue from each platform.
For three creators, this takes an hour.
For twenty, it takes a day.
For fifty, it doesn't get done at all, which means your ROI tracker is always behind and you're making decisions on incomplete data.
Signal 2: You've missed a post going live.
A creator posted and you didn't know for three days. By the time you checked, the engagement window had closed and you'd missed the opportunity to respond to comments, boost the post, or capture the content for repurposing.
This happens to every team running spreadsheets at scale because there's no automatic monitoring, you only know about content when you check manually.
Signal 3: Your outreach tracker has more than 50 rows and you can't tell what the actual status is.
You scroll through and you're not sure if that creator in row 47 got a follow-up or not. You're not sure if the contract for that partnership was actually signed or just verbally agreed.
Someone on your team reached out to a creator you already declined six months ago because nobody updated the status. At this scale, the spreadsheet creates more confusion than it resolves.
Signal 4: You're running multiple campaigns simultaneously and the sheets are multiplying.
Campaign A sheet, Campaign B sheet, Q4 gifting sheet, ambassador program sheet — and now nothing talks to anything else. You need to know which creators are in active partnerships across campaigns and you can't see it without opening four tabs and cross-referencing manually.
The information exists, but it's siloed in a way that makes decision-making slow and error-prone.
Signal 5: You're spending more than two hours per week on spreadsheet maintenance.
Our survey found that influencer marketers spend an average of five hours per week on spreadsheet maintenance. That's time spent on data entry, formatting, formula debugging, and updating statuses — not on finding better creators, writing better briefs, or building better relationships. If your spreadsheet is a significant part of your job description, something has gone wrong.
Signal 6: You can't answer "who are our top ten performing creators?" without digging.
In a well-functioning program, this should be a thirty-second question. If the answer requires opening multiple sheets, doing some mental math, and cross-referencing campaign dates — your tracking system isn't giving you the visibility you need to optimize.
Also Read: How to Know If Your Brand Is Ready for an Influencer Marketing Platform?
What the Transition Actually Looks Like
Moving from spreadsheets to a dedicated influencer marketing platform doesn't mean throwing out everything you've built. Most teams run both for a while. The platform handles the things that genuinely benefit from automation (metric tracking, content monitoring, campaign dashboards) while spreadsheets handle the things that benefit from flexibility (custom reporting formats, stakeholder-specific views, one-off analyses).
The transition usually starts with one specific pain point. Teams most commonly make the move when content monitoring becomes untenable — missing posts, losing track of what went live — or when campaign reporting becomes too time-consuming to do accurately.
The question isn't whether to use software instead of spreadsheets. It's which parts of your workflow have scaled beyond what spreadsheets can handle, and whether the cost of a platform is justified by the time and accuracy you'd recover.
Where to Begin
If you're at the point where your spreadsheets are accurate and your team is spending less than two hours a week maintaining them, the templates above will serve you well. Come back to this when the friction starts showing up.
If you're already feeling the signals — posts slipping through, metrics never quite up to date, onboarding a new team member and realizing the system only works because one person holds it in their head — Impulze.ai is worth a look.
Find and vet creators from 250M+ profiles across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube with engagement data, audience demographics, and fake follower detection built in
Manage your full pipeline from outreach to confirmed, in one place that doesn't require manual status updates
Track campaign content automatically so you know when posts go live without checking manually
Report on performance across your whole program without spending Friday pulling metrics from four platforms
The spreadsheet templates above are a genuine starting point. Impulze.ai is where you go when the starting point isn't enough anymore.
Every influencer marketer uses spreadsheets. Even the ones with dedicated platforms. Even the ones who swear they've moved past them.
There's a reason for that; spreadsheets are free, infinitely flexible, shareable with anyone, and require zero onboarding. When you're managing five creator relationships, a well-built Google Sheet does the job just fine.
But there's also a point where spreadsheets stop being a tool and start being a bottleneck. You miss a post going live. You lose track of which creator got which promo code. You spend Friday morning manually pulling metrics from four different platforms into a master doc that's already three days out of date.
This guide gives you both things: the actual templates worth using, built around what influencer marketers actually track and an honest look at the signals that tell you you've outgrown them.
👉 Grab the free template pack here (Google Sheets — no email required, just make a copy)
What's in the Template Pack
The pack includes five separate sheets, each covering a distinct part of the influencer marketing workflow. You can use them individually or keep them in one connected workbook, depending on how your program is structured.
Creator Discovery & Vetting Tracker for building and qualifying your outreach list
Outreach & Pipeline Tracker for managing the full collaboration lifecycle from first contact to signed
Campaign Performance Tracker for measuring results per creator and per campaign
Content Calendar & Deliverables Tracker for managing what's due, what's approved, and what's live
ROI & Budget Tracker for tracking spend vs. results and making the case internally
Let's walk through each one.
Sheet 1: Creator Discovery and Vetting Tracker
This is where most influencer programs start and where most spreadsheets are first built from scratch, badly, under time pressure.
The discovery tracker exists to answer one question before you reach out to anyone: is this creator actually worth pursuing? It's where you capture the raw data you need to make that call quickly without going back to check profiles three times.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | Full name and handle |
Platform | Instagram / TikTok / YouTube |
Follower count | At time of review |
Engagement rate | Likes + comments / followers × 100 |
Engagement rate vs. benchmark | Is their rate above or below average for their tier? |
Audience location (%) | % of audience in your target market |
Audience age range | Does it match your customer profile? |
Fake follower estimate (%) | Flag above 20% |
Niche/content type | What do they primarily post about? |
Previous brand collabs | Have they worked with competitors? |
Vetting status | Pass / Review / Reject |
Notes | Anything that stood out — good or bad |
How to use it:
Build this list before you start outreach. The goal is to get to a shortlist of creators where every row has passed a minimum threshold across engagement rate, audience location, and fake follower percentage. Anyone who doesn't pass basic vetting should be marked Reject before you spend time on outreach.
The columns that most brands skip and shouldn't are audience location and fake follower estimate. A creator with 100K followers and 4% engagement looks great until you check that 70% of their audience is in a market you don't serve. Add those columns from the start.
Also Read: The Complete Influencer Vetting Checklist: Things to Check Before You Partner
Sheet 2: Outreach and Pipeline Tracker
Once you have a vetting shortlist, you need to track where each creator is in the relationship lifecycle. The outreach tracker is essentially a lightweight CRM, not as powerful as a dedicated tool, but enough to prevent the thing that kills most small programs: losing track of who you've contacted, when, and what happened.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name + handle | |
Email / DM contact | Where you're reaching out |
Outreach date | When you first contacted them |
Follow-up 1 date | |
Follow-up 2 date | |
Response received | Yes / No |
Response date | |
Current status | Outreached / Interested / Negotiating / Confirmed / Declined / Ghosted |
Agreed fee | |
Product sent | Yes / No + date |
Contract signed | Yes / No |
Notes | Any context from conversations |
How to use it:
The status column is the most important one. Keep it updated after every interaction and filter by status before each work session. "Ghosted" is a valid status. Don't keep following up with someone who hasn't responded after four touches. "Negotiating" means you need to take action. "Confirmed" means move to the campaign tracker.
Color coding the status column by stage (yellow for in-progress, green for confirmed, grey for closed/declined) makes it much faster to read at a glance. Add that conditional formatting when you set it up.
Sheet 3: Campaign Performance Tracker
This is the sheet most brands should have but often build wrong. The most common mistake: tracking the metrics that are easy to pull (impressions, likes) rather than the ones that tell you whether the campaign actually worked.
The goal of this sheet is to give you a per-creator view of performance that you can compare across your program so you can see who's worth renewing and who isn't.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Campaign name | |
Platform | |
Content format | Reel / Story / TikTok / YouTube / etc. |
Post date | |
Link to content | |
Reach / Impressions | |
Likes | |
Comments | |
Shares / Saves | |
Engagement rate (actual) | Engagements / Reach × 100 |
Clicks / Link clicks | |
Promo code redemptions | |
Revenue attributed | If trackable |
Fee paid | |
CPM | Fee / (Impressions / 1000) |
Cost per engagement | Fee / total engagements |
Notes | Anything notable about performance |
The metrics that actually matter:
Impressions tell you how many times the content was served. Engagement rate tells you whether anyone cared. Promo code redemptions and revenue attributed tell you whether anyone bought. For most campaigns, the hierarchy should be: revenue > code redemptions > engagement rate > impressions. Build your tracker in that priority order, not the other way around.
CPM and cost per engagement are the numbers that let you compare campaigns across creators of different sizes — a macro creator might have lower engagement rate but better CPM than a nano creator. Without those normalizing metrics, you're comparing apples and oranges.
Sheet 4: Content Calendar and Deliverables Tracker
Managing deliverables across multiple creators is where spreadsheet programs most often break down — but a well-structured content calendar can hold it together for a while.
This sheet answers a simple question at any given moment: what's due, what's approved, what's live, and what's late?
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Platform | |
Deliverable type | Story / Reel / TikTok / YouTube / etc. |
Brief sent date | |
Draft due date | |
Draft received | Yes / No |
Feedback sent | Yes / No + date |
Revision due | |
Approved | Yes / No |
Go-live date (agreed) | |
Actual live date | |
Link to live content | |
Status | Draft pending / Under review / Approved / Live / Late |
How to use it:
Sort by go-live date and review weekly. Anything where the actual live date is blank and the agreed go-live date has passed needs immediate follow-up. Anything in "Under review" that's been sitting for more than 48 hours needs to be actioned on your end.
The "Brief sent date" column matters more than most teams realize. If a creator posts late, the first question is when you sent the brief. A brief sent with five days' notice produces worse content and lower compliance rates than one sent two weeks out. Tracking this over time shows you whether your operational process is contributing to delays.
Sheet 5: ROI and Budget Tracker
This is the sheet you need when someone above you asks "what are we actually getting from influencer marketing?" It consolidates spend and results across your whole program into a format you can present.
Columns to include:
Column | What to track |
Creator name | |
Campaign | |
Fee paid | |
Product value sent | If gifting — include cost |
Total investment | Fee + product value |
Reach delivered | |
Engagements delivered | |
Clicks / visits | |
Promo code redemptions | |
Revenue attributed | |
Estimated media value | Optional — use your CPM benchmark |
ROI | Revenue / Total investment |
Notes |
At the bottom of this sheet, include a summary row:
Total investment across all creators
Total revenue attributed
Overall program ROI
Average CPM across the program
Average cost per engagement
This is the number your CMO or founder wants to see. A well-maintained ROI tracker means you can pull it at any time rather than spending a day before a quarterly review reconstructing what you spent and what it produced.
How to Use All Five Sheets Together
These sheets work as a connected system, not five separate documents. The flow is:
Discovery tracker → Outreach tracker → Campaign tracker + Content calendar → ROI tracker
A creator moves from a row in your discovery tracker (vetted, status: Pass) to your outreach tracker (status: Outreached) to your campaign tracker and content calendar once confirmed, and finally their results feed into the ROI tracker.
When you're setting this up, the most important thing is to commit to updating it consistently. A spreadsheet that's accurate is useful. A spreadsheet that's three weeks out of date is a liability — it creates false confidence and causes you to miss things.
Pick a cadence: quick daily status updates (5 minutes), a weekly performance pull (20–30 minutes), and a monthly ROI summary. That's enough to keep five sheets accurate without it becoming a part-time job.
Signs When Spreadsheets Stop Working
Here's the honest part of this guide.
Spreadsheets work well up to a point. That point is different for every team, but there are specific signals that tell you you've crossed it. If you recognize more than two or three of these, your spreadsheet is costing you more time than it's saving.
Signal 1: You're manually updating metrics after every campaign.
Every time a campaign ends, someone on your team opens the performance tracker and manually inputs reach, engagement, clicks, and revenue from each platform.
For three creators, this takes an hour.
For twenty, it takes a day.
For fifty, it doesn't get done at all, which means your ROI tracker is always behind and you're making decisions on incomplete data.
Signal 2: You've missed a post going live.
A creator posted and you didn't know for three days. By the time you checked, the engagement window had closed and you'd missed the opportunity to respond to comments, boost the post, or capture the content for repurposing.
This happens to every team running spreadsheets at scale because there's no automatic monitoring, you only know about content when you check manually.
Signal 3: Your outreach tracker has more than 50 rows and you can't tell what the actual status is.
You scroll through and you're not sure if that creator in row 47 got a follow-up or not. You're not sure if the contract for that partnership was actually signed or just verbally agreed.
Someone on your team reached out to a creator you already declined six months ago because nobody updated the status. At this scale, the spreadsheet creates more confusion than it resolves.
Signal 4: You're running multiple campaigns simultaneously and the sheets are multiplying.
Campaign A sheet, Campaign B sheet, Q4 gifting sheet, ambassador program sheet — and now nothing talks to anything else. You need to know which creators are in active partnerships across campaigns and you can't see it without opening four tabs and cross-referencing manually.
The information exists, but it's siloed in a way that makes decision-making slow and error-prone.
Signal 5: You're spending more than two hours per week on spreadsheet maintenance.
Our survey found that influencer marketers spend an average of five hours per week on spreadsheet maintenance. That's time spent on data entry, formatting, formula debugging, and updating statuses — not on finding better creators, writing better briefs, or building better relationships. If your spreadsheet is a significant part of your job description, something has gone wrong.
Signal 6: You can't answer "who are our top ten performing creators?" without digging.
In a well-functioning program, this should be a thirty-second question. If the answer requires opening multiple sheets, doing some mental math, and cross-referencing campaign dates — your tracking system isn't giving you the visibility you need to optimize.
Also Read: How to Know If Your Brand Is Ready for an Influencer Marketing Platform?
What the Transition Actually Looks Like
Moving from spreadsheets to a dedicated influencer marketing platform doesn't mean throwing out everything you've built. Most teams run both for a while. The platform handles the things that genuinely benefit from automation (metric tracking, content monitoring, campaign dashboards) while spreadsheets handle the things that benefit from flexibility (custom reporting formats, stakeholder-specific views, one-off analyses).
The transition usually starts with one specific pain point. Teams most commonly make the move when content monitoring becomes untenable — missing posts, losing track of what went live — or when campaign reporting becomes too time-consuming to do accurately.
The question isn't whether to use software instead of spreadsheets. It's which parts of your workflow have scaled beyond what spreadsheets can handle, and whether the cost of a platform is justified by the time and accuracy you'd recover.
Where to Begin
If you're at the point where your spreadsheets are accurate and your team is spending less than two hours a week maintaining them, the templates above will serve you well. Come back to this when the friction starts showing up.
If you're already feeling the signals — posts slipping through, metrics never quite up to date, onboarding a new team member and realizing the system only works because one person holds it in their head — Impulze.ai is worth a look.
Find and vet creators from 250M+ profiles across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube with engagement data, audience demographics, and fake follower detection built in
Manage your full pipeline from outreach to confirmed, in one place that doesn't require manual status updates
Track campaign content automatically so you know when posts go live without checking manually
Report on performance across your whole program without spending Friday pulling metrics from four platforms
The spreadsheet templates above are a genuine starting point. Impulze.ai is where you go when the starting point isn't enough anymore.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are these spreadsheet templates really free?
Are these spreadsheet templates really free?
How many creators can I realistically manage with a spreadsheet?
How many creators can I realistically manage with a spreadsheet?
Do I need all five sheets or can I start with one?
Do I need all five sheets or can I start with one?
What's the difference between spreadsheets and influencer marketing platform?
What's the difference between spreadsheets and influencer marketing platform?
When should I actually switch to an influencer marketing platform?
When should I actually switch to an influencer marketing platform?
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