Create Your Own Mission on Greynola | Fan Missions & Creator Share
How to launch fan missions, attract submissions, and earn Creator Share revenue.
Yes — any creator on the Greynola platform can launch their own fan missions around any film or TV title they love. This feature transforms you from a mission participant into a mission creator, opening up an entirely new revenue stream through the Creator Share program.
Creating a mission is free and takes just a few minutes. You choose the title, write the brief, set the parameters, and publish. Once your mission is live, other creators can discover it and submit content to it — and every approved submission to your mission earns you a share of Greynola's monthly revenue.
How to Launch a Mission
Launching a fan mission starts from the Missions page. Click the Launch a Mission button and you will be guided through a simple setup process.
First, you choose the film or TV title your mission is connected to. This can be any title — a current release, a classic film, an upcoming premiere, a streaming show, or a deep-cut cult favorite. The mission system is not limited to titles that Greynola has partnered with.
Next, you write the mission brief. This is the creative direction that other creators will respond to. Good briefs are specific enough to provide clear direction but open enough to allow creative freedom. Instead of 'make a video about this movie,' try 'defend this film's most controversial scene' or 'explain why this director's visual style works for this story.'
You can also set optional parameters like accepted platforms, submission deadlines, and genre tags. These help creators discover your mission and understand what you are looking for.
Earning Through Creator Share
The Creator Share program is a monthly revenue distribution for mission creators. Every month, Greynola puts a percentage of platform revenue into the Creator Share pool and distributes it entirely to mission creators based on how many approved submissions their missions received.
The more submissions your missions attract, the larger your share of the monthly distribution. This means your earning potential scales with the quality and appeal of the missions you create.
To qualify for Creator Share in a given month, you need at least three active missions and a minimum of fifteen approved submissions across all your missions. These thresholds ensure that Creator Share distributions go to creators who are genuinely building and maintaining a portfolio of quality missions.
Distributions are calculated at the end of each month and paid out within the first week of the following month. April submissions count toward your April share, which is distributed in the first week of May.
What Makes a Great Mission
The best missions on Greynola share several characteristics. They are specific — giving creators a clear creative direction rather than a vague prompt. They are timely — connecting to titles and themes that are culturally relevant right now. And they are inspiring — challenging creators to make content they are genuinely excited about.
Study the missions that attract the most submissions and the highest-quality content. What do their briefs have in common? How are they framed? What creative challenges do they pose? Learning from successful missions helps you create better ones.
Promoting your missions on your own social channels can also drive submissions. When your audience sees that you have created a mission on Greynola, some of them will join the platform and submit — growing both the platform and your Creator Share earnings.
Mission Management
After launching a mission, you can edit the brief, update parameters, and monitor submissions through the platform. You have visibility into how many creators have submitted, how submissions are performing, and how your mission ranks relative to others.
You can create as many missions as you want. There is no limit on the number of active missions you can have. Building a diverse portfolio of missions across different genres, titles, and creative angles maximizes your chances of attracting submissions and earning Creator Share.
Think of mission creation as a content strategy in itself. Just as you plan your YouTube upload schedule or TikTok posting cadence, you can plan your mission creation calendar to align with release schedules, cultural moments, and trending conversations in the film world.