Countless industries are undergoing seismic change thanks to the rise of AI, and creator marketing is no exception.
In the span of just a few years, AI tools have gone from niche technical curiosities discussed in developer forums to household topics debated in living rooms, covered by broadcasters, and lauded by creators. This shift has produced a creator marketing ecosystem around AI brands that’s both enormous in scale and genuinely unusual in its composition.
Now, using CreatorIQ’s industry-leading data, we’re analyzing how creators are talking about the world’s top AI brands, revealing what best-in-class marketing looks like in the hottest sector of not just the creator economy, but the global economy at large.
To quantify this emerging industry, CreatorIQ looked at global creator posts from April 2025 through March 2026, tracking social media conversation around five leading AI brands:
Across these five brands, the data reveals not just extraordinary growth, but a set of structural patterns that have meaningful implications for any enterprise marketing team evaluating how to build a creator program in the AI era.
As you would expect for an industry as ascendant as AI, the numbers are striking.
Across the five brands we analyzed, total creator-driven Earned Media Value (EMV) exceeded $3.1B: not quite the same scope of viral discussion as other categories with more established creator marketing programs, but far outpacing those categories in terms of growth.
ChatGPT led in absolute terms, generating $1.7B EMV from more than 104k creators across 372k posts—figures that would be exceptional in any product category, let alone one that barely existed at commercial scale five years ago. NVIDIA followed at $713M EMV, while Google Gemini came in at $550M EMV.
But more revealing than raw totals are the growth figures for these brands.
Compared to the prior 12-month period, Google Gemini's EMV increased 954% YoY, while Claude by Anthropic's grew 1.4k%. Gemini's creator count expanded 765% in a single year; in comparison, Claude's grew 814%.
These aren’t the numbers of a maturing category consolidating around established players. These are the numbers of a category in the middle of its fastest expansion phase, with the competitive landscape still very much in motion.
The brands investing in their creator programs now—building creator relationships, generating third-party content at scale, and establishing a presence across the platforms where AI conversations are happening—are compounding a competitive advantage that will be significantly harder to close down the line.
In recent years, YouTube has cemented its status as a publishing hub, commanding massive attention among Gen Z audiences and rewriting the rules for longform content consumption. YouTube has also proven a uniquely friendly platform for creators, especially when it comes to garnering consumer trust. Finally, YouTube plays a key role in fueling the LLMs that power brand discoverability in the age of AI.
Thus, across every AI brand in our analysis, YouTube dominates the EMV distribution of top-performing creator posts. Among the highest-value posts tracked, YouTube accounted for:
YouTube also accounts for a disproportionate share of total EMV: 72% for NVIDIA, and between 37% and 43% for the software AI brands, despite those brands also having significant Instagram and TikTok presences.
This dominance isn’t simply a reflection of YouTube's overall size. Instead, it reflects a structural alignment between the nature of AI products and the nature of YouTube content.
By their nature, AI tools are high-consideration products. Understanding what they do, how they compare to alternatives, and how to integrate them into a workflow requires more than a fifteen-second clip. Given these factors, the content that performs best—tutorials, benchmark comparisons, explainers, product deep-dives, use-case demonstrations—is inherently long-form.
As a result, YouTube's format, search infrastructure, and audience behavior are well-suited to this kind of content in ways that short-form platforms aren’t (at least not yet).
Data from individual posts about top AI brands reinforces this hypothesis. The single highest-EMV posts in our dataset, generating $300-$385k per video, are almost uniformly YouTube videos. In this market, a creator who publishes a 20-minute comparison of AI productivity tools, or a comprehensive GPU review, generates a more powerful signal than a 30-second clip.
For brands managing creator programs at AI-focused companies, the implications are clear. Brands that invest in cultivating relationships with high-quality YouTube creators, and provide these creators with the resources to produce authoritative long-form content, are building a discoverability and credibility asset that shorter-form activity alone can’t replicate.
Among the more interesting findings in our data is the sheer diversity of creator types driving social media performance metrics for AI brands. Rather than a single dominant creator profile, three distinct archetypes emerge, each generating value in different ways:
Technical Creators
Integration Creators
Global Creators
Across our data on these companies’ top posts, 24 creators appeared in the leaderboards of more than one AI brand during the same twelve-month period. That number is modest relative to these brands’ total creator population, but the pattern it represents is significant:
A small, highly influential community of technical creators is producing comparison and benchmark content that spans the AI landscape as a whole.
Creators like Doug Sharpe, who appeared across ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot’s leaderboards, are treating AI as a category beat in the way that automotive journalists cover cars, or beauty editors cover skincare. These creators aren’t advocates for any single platform; instead, they operate as category navigators, helping large audiences understand a rapidly evolving landscape.
The brands that cultivate relationships with these creators, providing them with the context and access to cover their platforms accurately and favorably, are investing in one of the category’s highest-leverage opportunities.
One data point illustrates how these multi-brand content dynamics are already materializing: a single YouTube video from a device-focused creator covering AI integrations in a new computer drove over $300k EMV for both Google Gemini and Microsoft Copilot simultaneously.
As AI features become standard components of both hardware and software products, multi-brand attribution of this kind will become increasingly common. Moreover, the creator relationships that enable this content will become increasingly valuable.
Taken together, the data from these five brands points toward a set of structural characteristics that define high-performing creator programs at top AI companies:
Focus on the scale and diversity of your creator community, not concentration.
Platform strategies should follow content formats, not trends.
Geographic expansion is a growth lever, not an afterthought.
Prioritize integration, not exclusivity.
Embrace competition, not restriction.
Global brands that are serious about building competitive creator programs in the AI era need an intelligence infrastructure suited to the challenges of this era. They need to identify the right creators across multiple archetypes, verify their audience quality, measure performance longitudinally, and understand how their brand is being represented amid a global, multi-platform content ecosystem.
This capability will separate creator marketing programs that compound over time from those that generate activity without strategic return, and determine which top AI brands command the widest, most passionate audiences on social media.
Want to learn more about how creator marketing is evolving in the age of AI?