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Brief tracker

How to paste a Whop brief, log each submission, and watch the approval rate and earnings memory build per brief over time.

Brief tracker

The brief tracker is where you learn which campaigns actually pay you. Paste a brief, log each submission, and the dashboard fills in your approval rate and earnings as you go.

What this is honestly

Whop does not expose Content Rewards through its public API. We checked. There are no endpoints for the brief list, the budget percentage, the payout cap, or the approval rate. Anything you read claiming automatic Whop brief sync is lying or scraping which gets banned.

So Subedit unifies the briefs you connect to it. You paste a brief URL once, you log each submission as you make it, and we learn your numbers from your own data. After about ten submissions per brief the approval rate and revenue per thousand views start to mean something.

Adding a brief

Open /briefs. Click Add a brief. Paste the brief URL from Whop, paste the brand name if you have one, and pick the source. Whop briefs source as whop, YouTube briefs as youtube, direct deals as direct, and anything else as other.

The source enum exists so we can add Whop OAuth import later without breaking your data. For now treat it as a tag.

Logging a submission

Open any brief. Click Add submission. The form asks for the platform, the audio track you used, and the status. Default status is pending. Update it to approved or rejected when Whop pays out or kills the submission.

The earnings field is inline. Click the cell, type the dollar amount, click away. Saves on blur. We do not ask for a save button because you will be doing this a lot.

The analytics

Each brief shows three numbers.

  1. Approval rate. Approved divided by approved plus rejected. Pending submissions are not in the denominator because a pending submission is limbo, not loss. A brief with one pending and nothing else reads as Not enough data yet, not zero percent.
  2. Total earnings. Sum of every approved submission with an earnings value.
  3. Revenue per thousand views. Earnings divided by view count, scaled. Only populated when you fill in the view count column.

What you actually do with this

After a month of logging you will see one brief running at sixty percent approval and another at fifteen percent. Drop the loser. Spend that submission budget on the winner. That is the whole pitch. Memory beats hunch.

Limits

The tracker only knows what you tell it. If you forget to log a submission it does not exist as far as the analytics are concerned. Get into the habit of logging the moment you submit.

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