Brand deal pricing in Nigeria
Nigeria brand-deal fees run roughly 25% of US rates — but USD-denominated diaspora-targeted deals lift the effective multiplier. ARCON regulates ad content. Most premium deals come from diaspora-targeted (US/UK) brands.
- • Local-brand deals: priced in NGN, multiplier ~0.25x US.
- • Diaspora / global-brand deals targeting Nigeria: typically priced in USD at near-US rates.
- • Long-form integrations (60–90 sec reads) command higher ROI than dedicated sponsored videos in every Nigeria category we track.
Disclosure and compliance in Nigeria
ARCON regulates ad content. Most premium deals come from diaspora-targeted (US/UK) brands. Failure to disclose can result in regulator fines and platform shadow-bans — always include the relevant tag in the first 100 characters of your video/post.
Why brand deals aren't free money
Every sponsored video has hidden costs. View drop: branded content gets 5–25% fewer views than organic, especially when the product is obvious or off-niche. Production overhead: scripting reads, sourcing B-roll, sending revisions for approval. Trust cost: each off-brand sponsor erodes audience confidence in your recommendations, which compounds over time. The fee minus these costs is the real number — and for low-fit brands, it can be negative even when the check looks attractive.
- • Track view delta on sponsored vs organic videos quarterly — your real retention impact may differ from the 12% default.
- • Build a 'no list' of categories you won't promote regardless of fee (predatory loans, sketchy supplements, etc.).
- • Front-loaded reads convert better than back-loaded ones, but cost more in view drop. A/B test.
When the math says 'decline'
If net value < 1.5x what an organic video would earn, decline or counter. Common decline patterns: dedicated whole-video sponsorships at sub-3x multiples (huge view drop and trust cost for a single fee), short-window exclusivity deals that lock you out of better-fitting brands, and any deal where trust cost is over 15% of fee — that's the audience telling you not to take it.
FAQ
How much do Nigeria creators charge for brand deals?
Nigeria brand-deal fees run roughly 25% of US rates — but USD-denominated diaspora-targeted deals lift the effective multiplier. A useful starting rule: charge $100–$200 per 10k average video views for local deals, then multiply by 0.25 relative to US benchmark rates. USD-denominated global-brand deals can ignore this multiplier.
What disclosure rules apply to sponsored content in Nigeria?
ARCON regulates ad content. Most premium deals come from diaspora-targeted (US/UK) brands.
Should I price brand deals in NGN or USD?
Use NGN for local brands and USD for international/global advertisers. Pricing exclusively in NGN can leave 20–40% on the table when working with global agencies; pricing exclusively in USD will lose you local SMB advertisers. Maintain both rate cards.
How do I price a brand deal?
Use a CPM model: $20–$60 per 1,000 expected views for an integrated 60-second read, $40–$120 for a dedicated sponsored video. Multiply by niche multiplier (finance/tech: 1.5–2x; lifestyle: 0.8–1x). The brand fee should net to at least 2x what the video would earn organically.
Should I always disclose brand deals?
Yes, legally required in the US (FTC), UK (ASA), EU (UCPD), and most major markets. Disclosure also doesn't hurt conversion — clearly labeled sponsored content actually outperforms hidden sponsorships because it preserves trust. Use clear language: 'Sponsored by X' or 'This video is brought to you by X.'
What's a realistic view drop for sponsored videos?
5–10% for tasteful integrations (60-second read inside a long-form video), 10–20% for dedicated sections with screen overlay, 20–40% for whole-video sponsorships. Hard-sell product reviews can drop 30–50% on a misfit brand. Track your own numbers — niche audiences vary.
How do I handle exclusivity clauses?
Push back. Standard ask is 30 days category exclusivity post-publication. Push back on anything over 60 days unless the fee is at least 50% higher than your usual rate. Never accept 'permanent' exclusivity in a contract — that's a lifetime commitment for a one-time fee.