Los Angeles-based Fixated acquired Studio71 , the creator network that generated approximately $290 million in revenue in fiscal year 2025, from German media conglomerate ProSiebenSat.1. The deal closed Monday. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Most of the coverage will treat this as a transaction.

It is something larger: the clearest signal yet that the creator economy has entered a full consolidation cycle, and that the roll-up playbook private equity has used to dominate every other fragmented industry for three decades has arrived in the creator space.

As counsel to some of the largest creators in the world on IP, M&A, and exit strategy, I have watched this cycle build for 18 months. This deal is not the beginning. It is the confirmation.

1. What Fixated Is Actually Building And Why The Speed Matters

Fixated has been executing an aggressive acquisition strategy: Camp Talent, Moondust Management , Ellify , and Elevate ; and now Studio71, giving the combined company a global network of more than 1,000 creators with billions of monthly views across YouTube, TikTok, Snap, Twitch, and other platforms.

That is five acquisitions in approximately five months, backed by a $50 million strategic investment from Eldridge Industries secured in December 2025.

The velocity matters as much as the volume. In traditional PE roll-up strategy, speed of acquisition is a competitive moat, you consolidate the fragmented market before a competitor can establish the same scale. Fixated is executing that playbook with precision. Co-founders Zach Katz and Jason Wilhelm have stated their intention to give the creator economy its “Avengers assemble” moment.

According to Fixated, the deal marks a major step in its strategy to become a one-stop shop for “the next generation of creator-led media businesses.”

That framing is not marketing language. It is a valuation thesis. One-stop-shop infrastructure businesses with recurring revenue and defensible creator relationships price at materially higher multiples than standalone talent agencies. Fixated is not just aggregating creators — it is building the infrastructure layer that commands institutional multiples when it eventually exits.

2. What The Seller Tells Us About Legacy Media’s Retreat

The buy side of this deal is significant. The sell side is equally instructive.

ProSiebenSat.1 now expects a moderate decline in group revenue in 2026 as a direct result of the sale — meaning a traditional European media conglomerate just accepted a revenue haircut to exit the North American creator economy. Studio71 US had been part of ProSiebenSat.1 since 2015, when the company acquired the then-named Collective Digital Studio. That is a decade-long position, and ProSiebenSat.1 chose now to exit it.

This is the supply-side signal analysts should not miss. Legacy media companies are not distressed sellers in this cycle — they are strategic retreaters, concentrating on core markets while creator-native operators consolidate the infrastructure they built. ProSieben’s strategic rationale centers on refocusing on entertainment in the DACH region.

The pattern is consistent with what the Quartermast Advisors 2026 Creator Economy M&A Report identified: deal volume increased 17.4% year over year, from 69 transactions in 2024 to 81 transactions in 2025, with average transaction sizes increasing meaningfully — signaling growing confidence in the category’s durability.

The total creator economy is projected to surpass $500 billion in valuation by 2030.

As I wrote in Forbes last week, Unilever’s commitment to sourcing from 300,000 creators is not a marketing strategy — it is a procurement infrastructure signal, and it tells us exactly who the institutional buyers are building toward.

Legacy media is not exiting because the space is contracting. They are exiting because they are not the right operators for what it is becoming.

3. The Valuation Architecture Behind The Roll-Up Thesis

To understand why Fixated’s strategy is rational at an institutional level, the valuation math has to be examined clearly.

Creator economy software businesses trade at valuations ranging from 3.2x to 10.7x annual recurring revenue, with a median multiple of 5.8x. Software businesses accounted for 25.9% of all creator economy acquisitions in 2025, making them the most frequently acquired category.

The benchmarks from 2025’s landmark deals illustrate the spread: Bending Spoons acquired Vimeo for $1.38 billion , 3.3x its FY24 revenue of $417 million and 34.5x its adjusted EBITDA. Later purchased Mavely for $250 million , delivering an estimated 5x return for Nu Skin over a three-year holding period. Publicis Groupe acquired Captiv8 for $175 million at a 5.5x multiple on $32 million in net revenue.

In late 2024, Publicis also acquired Influential for $500 million , establishing that creator marketing infrastructure commands institutional attention at nine-figure scale.

Steven Bartlett’s Flight Group was valued at $425 million in October 2025, combining media, ventures, and tech to capture value at every stage of the creator lifecycle. Whalar, backed by Marc Benioff and Shopify, reached a $400 million valuation on a six-pillar ecosystem model spanning an influencer agency, creator campuses, a gaming studio, and a venture arm. (Disclosure: Whalar is a client of Tyler Chou Law for Creators, PC.)

The structural logic is consistent across all of these deals: most creator economy companies are currently valued at 5x to 9x EBITDA, but that range widens dramatically when the business shifts from service revenue to recurring-revenue infrastructure. A roll-up that consolidates fragmented service businesses into a recurring-revenue platform captures the multiple expansion at exit, the oldest value-creation mechanism in private equity, now operating in the creator space.

4. What This Means For The 1,000 Creators Now Inside Fixated’s Portfolio

Studio71’s clients include Dhar Mann Studios, Joey Graceffa, Boyce Avenue, Tyler Oakley, the Prince Family, Typical Gamer, Unspeakable, Lazarbeam, and Matteo Lane: a roster that represents, in aggregate, billions of views and decades of audience trust.

Those creators just became part of a PE-backed roll-up whether they negotiated that transition or not. That is not a criticism of Fixated, it is a structural reality of acquisition that every creator in an institutional portfolio should understand.

When a management company, agency, or network is acquired, the contracts that govern creator relationships transfer with the entity. The key question is one I raise in every due diligence I conduct at CreatorArq , is whether those contracts contain change-of-control provisions, assignment restrictions, or exit clauses that give the creator any leverage when the entity holding their agreement changes hands.

Most do not. Most creator contracts were drafted for a bilateral relationship with a specific company, not for a world in which that company becomes a line item in a PE portfolio. The creators who will navigate this cycle successfully are the ones who audit those provisions now, before the next acquisition, not after.

5. An Attorney’s Perspective On What Deals Like This Reveal

The Fixated–Studio71 transaction is the most visible example of a consolidation pattern I see in deal flow every week. The buyers doing these deals are not paying for subscriber counts. They are paying for three things: owned infrastructure, recurring revenue, and clean chain of title on intellectual property.

As RockWater analysts noted in their 2026 outlook, the market is moving away from vibes-based valuations to standardized metrics, and the bid-ask spread between founder expectations and buyer offers is beginning to narrow as public filings reveal actual multiples. That transparency is accelerating deal velocity.

What it is also doing is exposing the gap between creators who built acquirable businesses and creators who built high-paying jobs. When institutional buyers run due diligence on a creator business, the first questions are not about views or engagement rates. They are about IP ownership: who holds the trademarks, who signed the work-for-hire agreements, whether contractor classifications are clean, and whether the business can generate revenue if the founder stops appearing on camera.

The 2026 M&A forecast expects a surge in lower middle-market deals in the $10 million to $100 million range as buyers and sellers can finally agree on the math. That is the segment where most of the creators I advise will transact. And the ones who will command the top of that range are the ones who built IP-clean, founder-independent businesses with recurring revenue, not the ones with the largest audiences.

What Founder-Led Creators Should Do Now

• Audit your management and network agreements for change-of-control (i.e., assignment) provisions. If your representation agreement does not address what happens when your management company is acquired, you have no leverage in that transaction.

• Separate your IP from your operating entity. The IP that makes your business valuable, characters, formats, trademarks, content catalog, should sit in a holding structure that is not commingled with your operating liabilities.

• Build recurring revenue before the buyer calls. Membership platforms, licensing agreements, and subscription products carry materially higher valuation weight than ad-supported or sponsorship-dependent revenue. The Fixated deal is a reminder that buyers are paying for predictable cash flow, not peak performance.

• Clean the chain of title. Every editor, writer, and contractor who contributed to your creative output without a signed work-for-hire agreement is a potential diligence problem. In an eight-figure deal, a single unresolved contractor claim can reduce your purchase price by seven figures and require additional escrow at closing.

• Document the operating spine. Buyers in this consolidation cycle are building infrastructure businesses, not acquiring talent. The creator businesses that will command premium multiples are the ones that can demonstrate a stranger could operate them.

The Bottom Line For Leaders

ProSiebenSat.1 built a $290 million revenue creator business over a decade and sold it to a three-year-old startup backed by $50 million in PE capital. That is not a story about who had more money. It is a story about who had the right infrastructure thesis at the right moment in the consolidation cycle.

The 2026 M&A forecast from Quartermast is unambiguous: infrastructure businesses will become prized acquisition targets as the creator economy scales, and more creator-founded companies will achieve meaningful exits this year than in any prior year.

The roll-up era is not theoretical anymore. It closed on Monday.

The only question that remains is the same one I ask every creator who walks through the door at CreatorArq: when the buyer calls, will your business be ready, or will due diligence reveal that what you built was a job, not an enterprise?

Build the infrastructure. Own the IP. Engineer the exit.

Content is King. IP is Queen. Own the whole board.