Plain definitions

Glossary

Crisp, citable definitions for the contract, security, paywall, fan-engagement, and creator-monetization terms that come up in management pitches. Bookmark a term, or link straight to it.

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2

2FA (Two-factor authentication)

A second login step beyond a password.

Two-factor authentication adds a one-time code or device check to logins. Who controls the 2FA method effectively controls the account, so it should stay with the creator.

A

Account audit

A review of a creator account to find growth, pricing, and security gaps.

An account audit is usually a pre-management review of the profile, feed, message flow, pricing, traffic sources, and security setup. A useful audit produces specific recommendations; a weak one is just a sales call with a checklist attached.

Also called
  • OnlyFans audit
  • profile audit
  • creator audit
Adult creator management

A broader phrase agencies use for managing creators on adult subscription platforms.

Adult creator management is often used when an agency wants to describe OnlyFans, Fansly, or similar work without putting a specific platform name in the headline. The services usually overlap with OFM: content planning, inbox work, traffic, paywall strategy, and revenue-share management.

Also called
  • adult talent management
  • adult content management
Agency roster

The creators an agency represents or claims to represent.

An agency roster is the group of creators under management. Public rosters are useful evidence, but creators should distinguish named, verifiable clients from anonymous screenshots or vague claims about managing hundreds of accounts.

Also called
  • creator roster
  • talent roster
  • managed creators
AOV (Average order value)

The average dollar amount of a fan purchase.

Average order value is total purchase revenue divided by the number of purchases in a period. In paywalled-content management, AOV is often used to judge PPV bundles, tip-menu items, and custom-content offers.

Also called
  • average transaction value
  • ATV
ARPU

Average revenue per user (subscriber) over a period.

ARPU is total revenue divided by the number of subscribers in a window. Agencies frequently quote ARPU lift as evidence of value, so creators should ask how it is calculated and over what timeframe.

Also called
  • average revenue per fan
  • average revenue per subscriber
Audience segmentation

Dividing fans into groups so offers and messages can be targeted.

Audience segmentation means separating fans by behavior, spend, renewal status, interests, or engagement level. It is the difference between sending one generic paid message to everyone and tailoring a PPV offer to new subs, expired fans, VIP buyers, or non-buyers.

Also called
  • fan segmentation
  • subscriber segmentation
  • list segmentation
Auto-renewal

A clause that renews the contract unless cancelled in a set window.

Auto-renewal extends a contract automatically at the end of its term unless the creator gives notice inside a specific window. Short notice windows buried in long contracts are a common trap.

B

Bundle

A discounted package of multiple pieces of paid content.

A bundle groups several videos, photo sets, or extras into one paid offer. Agencies use bundles to increase average order value, sell older content again, or give new subscribers a lower-friction first purchase.

Also called
  • content bundle
  • PPV bundle
  • fan favorites bundle

C

Chargeback

A payment dispute that reverses a fan charge after purchase.

A chargeback happens when a subscriber disputes a card charge through their bank or card issuer. For creators, repeated chargebacks can erase revenue and may signal that sales tactics, previews, or subscriber expectations are out of alignment.

Also called
  • payment dispute
  • disputed charge
  • reversal
Chat automation

Software or workflows that automate parts of a creator inbox.

Chat automation can include welcome messages, mass messages, PPV follow-up, renewal reminders, fan tagging, or AI-assisted reply drafts. It can reduce repetitive inbox work, but creators should ask where automation ends, who approves sensitive replies, and whether fans are being sold by a human, a script, or both.

Also called
  • AI chat automation
  • automated messages
  • DM automation
  • inbox automation
Chatter

A person who replies to subscriber messages on a creator’s behalf.

A chatter is a team member, often employed by a management agency, who handles direct-message conversations and pay-per-view sales in a creator’s inbox. Quality, transparency, and whether the chatter has full account access are the main points of contention for creators.

Also called
  • OF chatter
  • chat operator
  • inbox operator
Churn

The rate at which subscribers cancel over a period.

Churn is the percentage of subscribers who do not renew. High churn forces constant new-subscriber acquisition; reducing churn is one of the clearest ways management can add durable value.

Also called
  • cancellation rate
  • subscriber loss
Commission (revenue share)

The percentage of a creator’s earnings an agency keeps.

Commission, or revenue share, is the agency’s cut of gross or net creator earnings. Whether the percentage is taken before or after OnlyFans’ own 20% platform fee changes the real number materially.

Also called
  • management fee
  • agency cut
  • rev share
Content calendar

A schedule for posts, drops, promotions, and paid-message campaigns.

A content calendar turns creator output into a plan: what gets posted, what is held for PPV, when campaigns drop, and which platform each asset supports. It is one of the cleaner ways to tell organized management from reactive posting.

Also called
  • posting schedule
  • content schedule
  • drop calendar
Content vault

A library of prepared content that can be reused, bundled, or sold later.

A content vault is an organized library of photos, videos, captions, previews, and previously sold assets. Strong vault management helps a creator avoid running out of material, repeating offers too obviously, or losing track of what has already been sold to whom.

Also called
  • media vault
  • asset library
  • content library
Conversion rate

The percentage of people who take the action a campaign is designed to produce.

Conversion rate can describe social visitors who subscribe, subscribers who unlock PPV, expired fans who return, or message recipients who buy. The key is knowing the denominator: a 20% conversion rate means very different things if it is measured from profile visitors, active subscribers, or a hand-picked VIP list.

Also called
  • CVR
  • campaign conversion
  • subscriber conversion
Creator monetization

The umbrella term for turning a creator audience into paid revenue.

Creator monetization covers subscriptions, PPV, tips, customs, brand deals, affiliate sales, and other ways a creator earns from an audience. Agencies often use the phrase because it sounds platform-neutral while still describing the same revenue work that happens inside OnlyFans management.

Also called
  • fan monetization
  • audience monetization
  • content monetization
Creator operations

The back-office work that keeps a creator business running.

Creator operations can include scheduling, content storage, inbox workflows, reporting, contractors, approvals, and handoffs between the creator and agency team. It is a cleaner business phrase for the daily machinery behind a managed creator account.

Also called
  • creator ops
  • account operations
  • backend operations
Custom content

Paid content made for a specific fan request.

Custom content is created to order for one buyer rather than sold as a general PPV drop. Because it is higher-touch and harder to resell, pricing, boundaries, delivery time, and ownership should be clear before the creator accepts the request.

Also called
  • customs
  • custom request
  • made-to-order content

D

DM sales

Selling paid content, tips, or customs through direct messages.

DM sales is the revenue work inside a creator inbox: starting conversations, qualifying interest, sending PPV, following up, and closing custom requests. Many agencies call this fan engagement or inbox management because it sounds softer than sales.

Also called
  • inbox sales
  • chat sales
  • message monetization

E

Exclusive vs non-exclusive

Whether a creator may work with other agencies during the term.

An exclusive deal ties the creator to one agency; a non-exclusive deal leaves them free to test others or self-manage in parallel. Non-exclusive, short-term arrangements lower a creator’s switching cost and risk.

Exclusivity clause

A contract term barring a creator from working with anyone else.

An exclusivity clause prevents a creator from using another agency, platform, or sometimes any competing income stream for the contract term. The scope, duration, and carve-outs of an exclusivity clause are among the most important things to read before signing.

F

Fan engagement

A broad phrase for messaging, comments, retention, and paid-fan interaction.

Fan engagement can mean genuine community work, but in agency pitches it often includes inbox labor, PPV selling, tip prompts, and renewal nudges. Creators should ask which parts are human, which are scripted, and whether the person messaging fans is clearly authorized.

Also called
  • audience engagement
  • subscriber engagement
  • community management
Free page

A creator page with no subscription price, usually monetized through PPV and tips.

A free page lowers the barrier to follow and then relies on paid messages, locked posts, tips, customs, or bundles for revenue. Free-page strategy is usually more dependent on traffic volume, segmentation, and PPV execution than a paid subscription page.

Also called
  • free subscription page
  • freemium page
Funnel

The path from seeing a creator elsewhere to becoming a paying fan.

A funnel is the sequence that moves someone from discovery to payment: social post, link-in-bio, landing page, free follow, subscription, PPV, tip, or renewal. Agencies use funnel language to make traffic and paywall strategy sound like a single measurable system.

Also called
  • subscriber funnel
  • conversion funnel
  • fan funnel

I

Inbox management

Running direct messages, replies, sales follow-ups, and fan support.

Inbox management is the operational phrase for what many teams call chatting. It can include basic replies, fan notes, PPV follow-up, escalation to the creator, and sales scripts used by chatters.

Also called
  • DM management
  • message management
  • chat management

L

Link-in-bio funnel

The path from a social profile link to a paid creator page.

A link-in-bio funnel is the small conversion path that starts on TikTok, Instagram, X, Reddit, or another discovery channel and ends on a subscription or free page. Agencies may optimize the landing page, tracking, offers, and wording to avoid platform moderation while still moving traffic to the paywall.

Also called
  • bio link funnel
  • landing page funnel
  • link hub
LTV (Lifetime value)

The total revenue a fan generates over their relationship with a creator.

Lifetime value estimates what a fan is worth across subscriptions, PPV, tips, renewals, and customs. A high-LTV strategy does not just push one sale; it tries to keep fans buying without burning trust or driving churn.

Also called
  • fan lifetime value
  • subscriber LTV

M

Manager permissions

OnlyFans’ native feature for delegated access without sharing a password.

Manager permissions let a creator grant scoped account access to a team member through OnlyFans itself, rather than handing over a password. It is the safer alternative to credential sharing and a key security signal when vetting an agency.

Also called
  • delegated access
  • team access
  • scoped access
Mass message

A direct message sent to many fans at once.

A mass message is a broadcast DM, often used for PPV drops, discounts, announcements, or reactivation campaigns. Good mass messaging is segmented and timed; poor mass messaging sends the same sales pitch to everyone until fans mute or leave.

Also called
  • broadcast DM
  • blast message
  • campaign message
Multi-platform management

Managing a creator across OnlyFans and other paid or social platforms.

Multi-platform management covers revenue and traffic work across OnlyFans, Fansly, ManyVids, Instagram, TikTok, X, Reddit, link hubs, and adjacent creator platforms. It is often used when an agency wants to sell broader creator operations rather than a single-platform service.

Also called
  • cross-platform management
  • creator platform management

N

Net vs gross commission

Whether the agency’s cut is taken before or after platform fees.

A commission on gross is calculated on the full sale; a commission on net is calculated after OnlyFans’ 20% fee. The same headline percentage can mean different take-home pay depending on the base.

Notice period

How far in advance a creator must signal they are leaving.

The notice period is the lead time required to exit or stop an auto-renewal. A 60- or 90-day notice on a 12-month term can effectively lock a creator in for far longer than they expect.

O

OFM

Industry shorthand for OnlyFans management.

OFM usually means OnlyFans management: the agency, staffing, traffic, content, and inbox systems around a creator account. The abbreviation is common in agency, freelancer, and course communities because it is shorter and sometimes less visible to filters than the full phrase.

Also called
  • OnlyFans management
  • OF management

P

Password handover

Giving an agency a creator’s actual account login.

Password handover means an agency holds the creator’s real credentials, often with full control over payouts and settings. It removes the creator’s ability to revoke access cleanly and is widely treated as a red flag when a safer alternative exists.

Payout control

Who controls where creator earnings are paid and when withdrawals happen.

Payout control is one of the highest-stakes parts of a management relationship. A creator should understand whether earnings land directly with them, who can change banking details, and whether any agency commission is paid after the platform payout rather than by rerouting the payout itself.

Also called
  • banking control
  • withdrawal control
  • payment control
Paywall management

Managing what content is free, locked, subscribed, bundled, or sold by message.

Paywall management is the strategy around what fans can see for free, what sits behind a subscription, and what is sold separately through PPV, tips, bundles, or customs. It is also a common euphemism for OnlyFans management because it describes the money layer without naming the platform.

Also called
  • paywalled content management
  • paid content management
  • paywall strategy
PPV (Pay-per-view)

Locked content a subscriber pays an extra fee to unlock.

Pay-per-view refers to messages or posts that carry a separate price on top of any subscription. PPV often makes up the majority of a managed account’s revenue, which is why chat strategy matters so much to earnings.

Also called
  • paid message
  • locked message
  • paywalled content
PPV funnel

A planned sequence that teases, sells, and follows up on locked content.

A PPV funnel is a sequence rather than a single paid message. It may include a teaser, a locked offer, a reminder, a discount, a bundle, and a follow-up to fans who viewed but did not unlock.

Also called
  • paid-message funnel
  • PPV sequence
  • sales sequence
Premium content management

A platform-neutral phrase for managing paid creator content and fan revenue.

Premium content management usually means the same operational bundle as OnlyFans management: content planning, paywall strategy, fan engagement, traffic, reporting, and sales. The phrase is useful to know because agencies may use it to avoid adult-platform wording while offering the same service.

Also called
  • exclusive content management
  • subscription content management
Purchase rate

The share of targeted fans who buy a specific offer.

Purchase rate is the percentage of recipients or viewers who buy a PPV, bundle, custom, or other paid offer. It is related to unlock rate, but broader: it can apply to any paid campaign, not just locked content.

Also called
  • buy rate
  • campaign conversion rate

R

Rebill

A subscriber renewal or the setting that allows a subscription to renew.

Rebill is industry shorthand for subscription renewal. Teams track rebill behavior because it affects retention, forecastable revenue, and whether a fan is likely to keep buying PPV after the first month.

Also called
  • renewal
  • auto-renew
  • subscription rebill
References

Current or former creators who can speak to an agency experience.

References are creators who can verify what working with an agency is actually like. The strongest references are current, independently reachable, and willing to discuss contract terms, account access, communication, and results without the agency controlling the call.

Also called
  • creator references
  • client references
  • testimonials
Release period

The delay before platform earnings become available to withdraw.

A release period is the time between a fan payment and the creator being able to withdraw the money. Release periods matter in managed accounts because aggressive sales, refunds, or chargebacks can change how available earnings are reported and understood.

Also called
  • pending balance
  • payout delay
  • settlement period
Reporting dashboard

A report or tool showing account performance, campaigns, and revenue metrics.

A reporting dashboard can show gross revenue, net revenue, PPV sales, unlock rate, churn, rebill, message volume, and traffic sources. Creators should ask whether dashboard numbers are pulled from the platform, manually entered, or selectively reported.

Also called
  • analytics dashboard
  • performance report
  • KPI dashboard
Retention

The share of subscribers who keep renewing.

Retention is the inverse of churn: the portion of subscribers who stay month to month. Retention rates are a more honest signal of content and engagement quality than gross subscriber counts.

Also called
  • subscriber retention
  • renewal rate

S

SFS (Shoutout for shoutout)

A cross-promotion where creators promote each other to their audiences.

SFS stands for shoutout for shoutout. In adult creator growth, it usually means two creators, pages, or agency accounts trade promotional posts or messages to move traffic between audiences.

Also called
  • shoutout swap
  • cross-promo
  • promo swap
Social traffic

Visitors driven from social platforms into a paid creator funnel.

Social traffic comes from TikTok, Instagram, X, Reddit, YouTube, livestreaming, or other public channels. Agencies often separate social traffic from inbox monetization because one gets fans to the door and the other converts them after they arrive.

Also called
  • organic traffic
  • top-of-funnel traffic
  • SFW traffic
Subscriber list

A saved group of fans used for targeting messages or offers.

Subscriber lists let a team target specific groups such as new subscribers, expired fans, buyers, non-buyers, high spenders, or fans interested in a certain theme. Lists are the practical tool behind segmentation, mass messaging, and follow-up campaigns.

Also called
  • fan list
  • DM list
  • buyer list

T

Tail commission

A commission that continues after the management relationship ends.

A tail commission gives an agency a continuing cut from subscribers, traffic, or revenue it claims to have generated before termination. Creators should read tail language carefully because it can make leaving more expensive than the headline term suggests.

Also called
  • post-termination commission
  • trailing commission
  • sunset commission
Tip menu

A price list for paid requests, interactions, or custom content.

A tip menu turns common fan requests into stated prices. It can make boundaries and pricing clearer, but creators should make sure the menu reflects what they actually consent to provide and who is allowed to negotiate it.

Also called
  • menu
  • request menu
  • custom menu
Track record

Evidence that an agency has operated and delivered results over time.

Track record is the public or verifiable history behind an agency: years operating, named leadership, known creators, public case studies, references, media coverage, or durable company presence. It is stronger than screenshots because it can be checked outside the sales pitch.

Also called
  • operating history
  • proof of work
  • agency history
Traffic source

Where paying or potential fans come from.

A traffic source is the origin of a fan: Reddit, X, TikTok, Instagram, paid ads, SFS, a link hub, an affiliate, or another creator page. Knowing the source matters because traffic quality affects conversion, retention, chargebacks, and how dependent the creator is on an agency channel.

Also called
  • source of traffic
  • acquisition channel
  • fan source

U

Unlock rate

The percentage of fans who pay to open a locked PPV message or post.

Unlock rate is the share of recipients or viewers who buy a locked item. It is one of the most useful PPV metrics because it separates a good offer and segment from a message that only looked good because it was sent to a huge list.

Also called
  • PPV conversion rate
  • open-to-buy rate
Upfront fee

A charge an agency takes before producing any results.

An upfront fee is money paid to an agency in advance of any earnings. Legitimate management is typically paid from results via commission, so a required upfront fee is a frequently cited warning sign.

Also called
  • setup fee
  • onboarding fee
  • joining fee

V

Value ladder

A sequence of offers that moves fans from lower-priced buys to higher-priced ones.

A value ladder starts with a low-friction purchase and gradually offers higher-value, higher-priced content as trust builds. In PPV management, the goal is to avoid asking a new fan for the most expensive unlock before they have bought anything smaller.

Also called
  • offer ladder
  • PPV ladder
  • sales ladder
VIP fan

A high-spending fan who receives more attention or tailored offers.

A VIP fan is a subscriber who spends significantly more than average through tips, PPV, customs, renewals, or repeated purchases. Agencies may segment VIPs for personal follow-up, but creators should know how those fans are identified and who is messaging them.

Also called
  • whale
  • high spender
  • top fan

W

Welcome sequence

The first messages and offers a new subscriber receives.

A welcome sequence sets expectations after a fan subscribes or follows. It may include a greeting, boundaries, a tip menu, a low-priced first PPV, a question prompt, and a path into higher-value offers.

Also called
  • welcome DM
  • new-subscriber flow
  • onboarding sequence