By Lex Nova Lawyer × Thoolie
You wouldn’t hand over your likeness forever… but a lot of influencers do — without even realizing it.
Hidden inside brand collaboration agreements are clauses that can strip away your content rights, limit your earning potential, and keep your work in circulation long after you thought the deal was over.
Here’s how to spot the traps before you sign — and what to ask for instead.
🚩 Common Red Flag Clauses in Influencer & Brand Deals
| Contract Language | What It Really Means |
|---|---|
| “Irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide license” | They can use your post forever, anywhere, without paying you again. |
| “In any media now known or hereafter devised” | They own usage rights on platforms that don’t even exist yet. |
| “Exclusive collaboration” or “category exclusivity” | You may be blocked from working with competitors — even unpaid — for months. |
| “Brand may edit or modify content” | They can remix your post, strip context, or make you appear to say something you didn’t. |
| “All content created during the collaboration” | Includes drafts, outtakes, and behind-the-scenes footage — even if you never post it. |
| “Payment upon brand approval” | They can delay “approving” your post to delay your paycheck indefinitely. |
| “Exposure in lieu of payment” | You’re getting used — not paid. And it’s not enforceable. |
Questions to Ask Before You Sign
- What exact content are they licensing — just the final post, or more?
- How long can they use it, and on which platforms?
- Can they edit, boost, or repurpose your content?
- Is the deal exclusive? If so, what category and for how long?
- What’s the payment schedule? Is anything due up front?
- Do I retain ownership of the content I created?
For a deeper dive into how edits and usage approvals work, check out our Approval Rights Decoder.
✅ Safer Contract Language to Negotiate
| ❌ Red Flag | ✅ Safer Alternative |
|---|---|
| “Perpetual license” | “3-month license for Instagram only” |
| “Brand may modify content” | “No edits without influencer approval” |
| “All content created” | “License applies only to the final, approved post” |
| “Net 90 payment terms” | “50% upfront, 50% within 15 days of posting” |
🧠 Final Tip from Lex Nova Lawyer
If a clause sounds vague, it’s probably there to benefit them — not you.
Pushing back doesn’t make you “difficult.” It makes you a business.
A collaboration contract should protect both sides. If it only protects the brand, it’s not a partnership — it’s a power grab.
🔐 Want contracts built for creators?
Thoolie’s Influencer & Brand Collaboration Templates are written by an entertainment lawyer and designed to help you say yes to deals without losing your voice, content, or future opportunities.
And if you want to protect your face, voice, and name in the AI era, our Right of Publicity & AI Clause Decoder explains exactly how to keep synthetic versions of you in check.