Numbers, not faces
We're a data product. No fan photos, names, or contact details ever live in the UI. You get spending patterns and segments, never a contact list.
Then it outgrew the scripts, the spreadsheet, and eventually me. Here's how Creatorstaq happened.
I'm a software engineer who spent time doing data work for creator agencies. The platform analytics drove me up the wall: they tell you what you made, and almost nothing about why. I had access to the raw data and could see exactly what was missing. So I built it.
What started as a few scripts kept growing. Once the data lived in a database I controlled, I could finally ask the things the platform never lets you ask: which campaign actually paid off, which fans were worth chasing, how revenue shifted when the same fan followed more than one creator. Every answer raised three more, and the side project quietly turned into something far bigger than I'd planned.
The insights coming out of it (per-campaign ROI, exact cross-creator overlap, ghost revenue, whale analysis) weren't things any other tool offered. If it was this useful inside one agency, it'd be far more useful as a standalone product for the whole space. So I turned it into one.
That's Creatorstaq: a heavy data app, built by someone who cares more about whether a number is correct than whether it looks good on a slide. It exists because the questions were worth answering, and nobody else was answering them.
One thing worth saying plainly: I'm not an agency. I don't manage a roster and I have zero interest in your creators. Creatorstaq is software — I sell the tool, not what you do with it. The old fear that the people behind your analytics might quietly turn into a rival? Not a thing here.
We're a data product. No fan photos, names, or contact details ever live in the UI. You get spending patterns and segments, never a contact list.
Every dollar is labeled net or gross, never mixed. When the platform's data has gaps, we flag them. We'd rather show you an honest blank than a confident fabrication.
Built for many creators, many managers, many traffic sources, from day one. Role-based access, scoped reports, and a model that assumes a roster, not a single account.
Connect your accounts and see your whole roster clearly. You're up in minutes; the data builds from there.