YouTube’s Top Kids’ Influencers Announce Participation in SuperAwesome’s SafeFam Program

YouTube’s Top Kids’ Influencers Announce Participation in SuperAwesome’s SafeFam Program

At Kidscreen Summit 2018, over thirty YouTubers and five agencies announced participation in SuperAwesome’s SafeFam initiative. SafeFam’s content certification is designed for young YouTubers and their parents to better understand and navigate the digital safety and privacy requirements of the under-13 audience on YouTube.

Creators who have already signed up include DenisDaily and the rest of The Pals, SuperHeroKids, Gabe and Garrett, Grace’s World, Annie Rose, Hope Marie, The Daya Daily, The Fizz Family, The Crafty Girls, Millie and Chloe, Daniela Golubeva, BananaJamana and many more.

Also Read: Influencers Who Work Harder Deserve Deeper Rewards

SuperAwesome is the leading ‘kidtech’ company, whose technology, services and certification standards are widely used by the global kids’ digital media market.

The SafeFam program creates a set of standards and best practices for YouTubers who are engaged in creating content viewed by a younger audience. This program has been designed to empower content creators, and in many cases, their parents as well, to better understand the digital safety and privacy requirements of the U-13 audience.

Also Read: Forget Click-Through Rates, Focus on Emotional Engagement 

SafeFam comprises three elements:

  • Training on what it means to be brand-safe, kid-safe and the repercussions of not adhering to these principles.
  • Content is reviewed for brand safety and appropriateness, as well as kid safety, employment laws and parental control.
  • Access to SafeFam Support to help with any additional questions and updates for additional guidelines and best practices as they emerge.

If the content creators are under 16, SafeFam also educates their parents on best practices, such as filming time guidelines (maximum session time, no night-time recording etc). SafeFam is as much about protecting the influencers themselves as it is about setting a standard for the content they produce for their young audiences.

Also Read: If A Picture’s Worth a Thousand Words, Then Visual, Interactive Content Is Priceless

Mother of well-known YouTuber Hope Marie and SuperHeroKids said, “Being the parent of influencers is stressful – there’s hardly any guidance on what they should be doing, or what might be seen badly by others. The guidance from SafeFam makes me confident that they are going to be safe producing content for YouTube, and not going to end up as the subject of a crazy scandal. It gives me peace of mind.”

Parents of YouTuber, The Daya Daily stated, “A program like SafeFam helps us make the internet safer for kids. We love that SafeFam is aimed at keeping kids safe and we love that brands that work with SuperAwesome value that too, it’s important for us to know that our kids are exposed to safe content on the internet and SafeFam is guiding us to produce this type of content.”

Jamie Jo, of popular art-focused channel BananaJamana commented, “I’ve always strived to make my channel kid-friendly because I want to ensure my content is responsible and can be viewed by all ages. I’m very happy that SafeFam recognizes my channel as a safe place parents and brands can trust. I will always put the safety of my younger audience first.”

Also Read: HYPR Launches Designated Market Areas (DMA) Tool For Influencer Audiences

Mitch Smiley, Marketing Director for Wildworks (developer of the huge kids hit, Animal Jam ) stated: “At WildWorks, we’re lucky to work with many influencers who use Animal Jam for their content. With the recent news, we think it’s vital that content creators have guidelines on how to make kid-appropriate videos on YouTube. That’s why we’ve encouraged the influencers we work with to join SafeFam. SafeFam reassures us that the creators we work with understand the requirements of the kids digital ecosystem and that they continue making great kid-appropriate content.”

Lillian LeBron, Partner at Beacon Media, the largest kids media-buying agency in the US commented: “SafeFam is a fantastic initiative and one that is really needed across the YouTube ecosystem. As a platform which wasn’t originally built for kids, it’s critical that we establish clear content and safety guidelines for kids YouTube content. SafeFam adds integrity, brand safety and much-needed guidelines for YouTubers”

Britt Bagnall, founder of YouTube talent agency Cherry Pick Talent stated, “There are so many role models on YouTube whose young audience idolize them! We wanted to offer a program like SafeFam to teach these influencers how to consciously create safe content for their audience and be one of the good guys so parents know when their kids are spending time on their channel, they will not be subject to anything inappropriate or unsafe.”

Also Read: How NOT to Handle a Collaboration Request When it Comes to Influencer Marketing

YouTube’s Top Kids’ Influencers Announce Participation in SuperAwesome’s SafeFam Program
Dylan Collins

“At SuperAwesome, we are wholly committed to building kidtech that supports the growth of the digital media ecosystem for children. YouTube is a large player in that ecosystem so it is important that we create tools for the influencers of all ages, young influencers’ parents and brands who wish to engage with children on that platform. While YouTube has created the Intelligence Desk to spot inappropriate content earlier, there remains a lack of content guidance for YouTubers creating wholesome, kid-friendly content. SafeFam has two very clear goals: a) establishing clear content policies for kids content creators on YouTube and b) increasing brand safety so that these YouTubers have more revenue opportunities,” said Dylan Collins, CEO SuperAwesome .

Recommended Read: The Data & Measurement Behind Successful Influencer Marketing

Picture of MTS Staff Writer

MTS Staff Writer

MarTech Series (MTS) is a business publication dedicated to helping marketers get more from marketing technology through in-depth journalism, expert author blogs and research reports.

You Might Also Like