A 30-second GRWM and a 90-second SaaS testimonial are different jobs, and the pay reflects it — SaaS UGC is one of the highest-paying corners of the category, and most creators never even consider it.
What SaaS UGC pays
Why SaaS pays this much more
Three things stack here. First, supply: far fewer creators can convincingly walk through software on camera than can film a product try-on — it's a genuinely different skill, closer to a short explainer video than a UGC clip. Second, budget: B2B software companies spend more per acquired customer than most D2C brands, and that shows up in what they'll pay for a single piece of content. Third, format: a SaaS testimonial or demo commonly runs 60–90 seconds with a script, talking points, and often a screen-share segment — meaningfully more production than a 15–30 second consumer clip.
Breaking in
- Start with tools you actually use. A real, specific use case ("I use this for X and it saved me Y") reads as genuine in a way a generic pitch never does — and B2B brands can tell the difference immediately.
- Practice reading a script naturally. Most SaaS UGC involves talking points or a rough script from the brand — sounding like yourself while hitting the required points is the actual skill being paid for.
- Don't over-index on technical expertise. Many SaaS brands specifically want a creator who sounds like their actual customer, not an expert — relatable often beats credentialed.
How this works on Plug
Price your testimonial or demo rate with the Rate Calculator, and for longer B2B engagements, set clear deliverables and timeline in a real contract — SaaS deals tend to involve more revision rounds and stakeholder feedback than consumer UGC, so get the terms in writing.