Sponsor Radar: 5 B2B Brands Buying Creator Attention This Week

Sponsor Radar: 5 B2B Brands Buying Creator Attention This Week

A weekly scan of publicly disclosed sponsor placements across creator-business podcasts, video shows, and newsletters, with five B2B brands creators can approach using warm, evidence-based angles.

The creator-business sponsorship market is leaning hard into operational pain this week. The strongest public signals came from B2B brands selling creators a way to save time, prove ROI, get paid, or look more professional to sponsors.
Coverage note: this issue only includes sponsorships that were publicly disclosed in recent creator, startup, marketing, video, podcast, and newsletter sources. It is a lead list, not an estimate of ad spend.
Creator-facing B2B tools are buying credibility in creator media. Marketing Brew's July 8 creator-economy piece carried a sponsor placement from Later, with copy about pairing brands with creators for answer-engine optimization; The Social Juice's July 4 newsletter was sponsored by Agorapulse around an AI content-mistakes playbook for social media brands. Both placements sell creator infrastructure to people already thinking about content distribution and brand attention. 1 2
Startup-ops sponsors are still thick in tech and business shows. This Week in Startups disclosed DigitalOcean, Agree.com, and Every.io as sponsors on its July 8 video episode, then Northwest Registered Agent, Vanta, and Sentry on its July 6 episode. That is a useful pattern for creators with founder, SaaS, AI, or operator audiences: brands are not only buying awareness; they are buying trust in moments where hosts discuss company-building problems. 3 4
The best sponsor reads are framed as workflow fixes, not generic brand mentions. HubSpot appeared in My First Million's recent episode page with a guide-style callout and the show-level disclosure that My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast; Agree.com was framed as the way to stop chasing invoices; Northwest Registered Agent was framed as a fast way to form a company and get a real business identity. The pattern is clear: give creators an offer that sounds like a task their audience already needs to finish. 5 3 4

Top 5 active sponsors

SponsorProduct promotedWhere it was sponsoredAngle used by the creatorSuggested outreach angle for new creators
HubSpotBusiness-growth content and HubSpot Media placementMy First Million's recent episode page disclosed the show as a HubSpot Original Podcast and pointed listeners to a HubSpot guide. 5The host-side framing was educational: take Sam and Shaan's operating lessons and package them into a useful free resource.Pitch a creator-led teardown: "I can turn your founder, sales, or CRM frameworks into a practical worksheet for operators, then distribute it through a high-intent founder audience."
LaterCreator pairing and answer-engine optimization support for brandsMarketing Brew's July 8 article about creators at Cannes carried a sponsor placement saying Later can pair brands with creators for answer-engine optimization. 1The angle tied creator marketing to a current brand problem: AI search and owned-channel discoverability.Pitch a short case series on "how buyers actually discover brands through creators and AI search," with deliverables across newsletter, LinkedIn, and short-form clips.
AgorapulseA free playbook on AI content mistakes for social media brandsThe Social Juice's July 4 newsletter disclosed Agorapulse as sponsor and promoted a playbook on five AI content mistakes. 2The creator made the offer feel urgent by naming the boardroom pain: lots of content shipped, unclear business outcome.Pitch an audit-led package: "I will review three audience brands' AI social content mistakes, then point readers to your playbook as the fix."
Agree.comContract-to-cash stack for signatures, invoices, billing, payments, and revenue recoveryThis Week in Startups' July 8 video description listed Agree.com as a sponsor; the July 8 copy positions it as a way to stop chasing invoices and automate contract-to-cash. 3The offer was pitched around a painful operational bottleneck: contracts signed faster, invoices paid faster.Pitch a creator-business segment: "How independent creators can turn sponsor verbal yeses into signed agreements and paid invoices without spreadsheet chaos."
Northwest Registered AgentBusiness formation and company identity setupThis Week in Startups' July 6 episode disclosed Northwest Registered Agent as a sponsor and framed the offer as forming a company quickly with an address, website, email, and phone number. 4The read sold legitimacy: look like a real company before investors, partners, or customers judge you.Pitch an early-creator monetization guide: "The first 10-minute admin setup before you invoice sponsors, sell a paid newsletter, or launch a community."

Warm outreach notes

For a new creator, the best opening is not "I have reach." It is "your current ad copy already works in my niche, and I can make the same promise feel native to my audience."
Use that logic this week:
  1. For creator-infrastructure brands like Later and Agorapulse, lead with audience proof: who in your audience manages content calendars, social reporting, brand partnerships, or AI-assisted publishing.
  2. For startup-ops brands like Agree.com and Northwest Registered Agent, lead with workflow timing: creators are forming LLCs, signing sponsor contracts, hiring help, and professionalizing their business stack.
  3. For media-network brands like HubSpot, lead with a repeatable content asset: teardown, worksheet, swipe file, mini-course, or newsletter series. Their current placements show they like educational offers more than generic logo exposure.
The short version: sponsors are buying creator trust where the audience is already in "build my business" mode. If your show or newsletter reaches creators at that moment, pitch the task, not the audience size.

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