StockCreator5 reviews
This score is based on 5 genuine reviews submitted via US-Reviews since 2026.
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Find companies you have experience with and write reviews about them! Your reviews contribute to a more transparent market and improve the reliability of companies.Quiet but flawed collab site
So there I was, three months into using the platform, checking the same listings over and over. I came in with seven years of brand experience and dozens of past collabs, expecting at least some traction. The site itself is functional — applying is easy and you get an “opted in” notification — but that’s often where it ends. Most brands never answer after that. Once a company actually shipped the product and delivery was fine, but when I asked where to send the video proof they went radio silent. Listings stay up for weeks, automated messages appear, yet follow-up and real customer service are pretty weak. Useful but flawed.
Booted mid-question, but not all bad
I was half drinking my second coffee when a coworker pinged me the Zoom link for a “free” webinar—curious, so I signed up. The invites and reminders showed up on time, that part worked fine. The presenters were upbeat and actually shared a few usable tips, so I was kind of pleasantly surprised, honestly. Midway through I hopped over to Trustpilot to check reviews — saw complaints about refunds and pushy upsells — and asked the hosts in chat if they could address those. I watched my message blink out, typed it again, blinked out again, and then, weirdly, I got booted from the room. Zoom said the host removed me. Awkward. Maybe tech hiccup, maybe not. Still, they followed up with an email containing the slides and a short recording, which I appreciated, so I'm glad I gave it a shot. Not perfect, but better than I feared, and honest.
Halfway through the payout mess
delivery of my funds stalled and their support was the only route forward. Customer service was slow at first, kind of scripted, made me feel like I’d missed some step. I pushed back, asked for a supervisor, sent screenshots, and repeated myself more than I wanted to. Eventually someone dug into the case, explained it was a verification hold and not an outright theft, and they walked me through what to send and how the release would work. It took longer than it should, and yes I lost time and trust, but the funds were released and I got most of what was due. Lesson learned: document everything, ask for escalation sooner, and don’t blindly add money without clear terms. I’m still cautious, but I’ll say the delivery and the human side of support improved once they actually engaged.
Surprisingly useful, but go in with caution
it helped me get a product off the ground, even though the process was messy. I needed this because my last attempt with another company flopped and I was running out of time to launch. The sales zoom gave a decent discount which pushed me to sign up. The actual work they delivered did turn into a usable digital product and I started getting inquiries. That felt good. On the flip side, the pitch was pretty high pressure and the onboarding was handled by a team I never met on the call — outsourced folks in another country — which is a little jarring. Refund policy is tight, and they did push to close disputes instead of fixing things right away. So yeah, not perfect. Still, the outcome mattered to me and it saved a stalled launch. If you can tolerate a firm salesperson and stay on top of the process, you can make it work. I’d use them again but with stricter boundaries and clear expectations up front.
Like the platform, not the gatekeeping
the campaigns are solid and fun to work on when you get picked, and the team (more on that below) is responsive — so I keep coming back. The problem is the hard cutoffs for engagement rate, follower counts, etc. That rule excludes creators who could easily deliver top-tier content but don’t meet arbitrary metrics. In my experience at other companies they sometimes let you submit a portfolio or past work to prove you’ll perform; that flexibility matters. I’d prefer Creator Co to let people apply and include a brief creator portfolio or examples, so selection isn’t just a numbers game. Aside from that, the platform itself is easy to use and the briefs are clear. A small emotional note: it’s frustrating at times, because I know talented creators get filtered out and that’s a missed chance for both sides. On the positive side, shoutout to Kiyana Ebrahimi — I’ve worked with her on multiple campaigns and she’s been consistently helpful, quick to answer questions, and genuinely collaborative. That kind of account manager makes a big difference and keeps me logging in, even when the rules annoy me. Overall I’d recommend Creator Co but suggest they rethink the strict eligibility rules.
About StockCreator
StockCreator is a software and services provider focused on tools for creating and managing stock-related content. Its offerings are aimed at organizations and professionals who publish financial or market information and need workflows for producing, formatting, and distributing stock data and related materials. The company’s activities center on supporting the preparation of stock content for use in digital channels and reporting contexts.
This information is based on publicly available data and is provided for orientation purposes only.
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Last update: April 2026
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Review with most votes
Like the platform, not the gat
the campaigns are solid and fun to work on when you get picked, and the team (more on that below) is responsive — so I keep coming back. The problem is the hard cutoffs for enga... Read onBy: Karen Welch