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Analysis

Social Docket launches to help creators decode brand deals before signing

Victoria Ibitoye | Apr 15, 2026

Creators sign contracts worth thousands, but how many understand them? That question sits at the centre of Social Docket, an AI-powered platform that launched this week to help creators make sense of brand deals before they sign.

Founded by lawyer and content creator Kameron Monet, the platform flags key terms, payment clauses, risks and missing protections in plain language. It's built on the premise that most creators only seek legal help once something has already gone wrong.

“There has to be a way to help creators be proactive,” Monet told The Daily Influence. “How do we get creators knowledgeable enough to advocate for themselves and read their contracts with certainty?”

Social Docket works by allowing users to upload contracts and receive a structured breakdown, including summaries, key dates, payment timelines and flagged risks. It also includes a workspace where creators can store and revisit past agreements – something Monet said is critical in a market where contracts continue to shape partnerships long after they are signed.

Monet recalled reviewing a deal for a creator who had seen her face on a billboard in New York but struggled financially. The issue came down to a single clause granting rights in perpetuity.

“Knowing the definition of a term is one thing,” she said. “The outcome is what you really need to know.”

The company went through two full rebuilds before launch, shifting from legal education to contract analysis, backed by early angel investment. Monet said she turned down the option to simply hire more lawyers and scale her consulting practice, choosing instead to build software.

It has since built a waitlist of more than 1,700 users, with some beta accounts converting to paid before it went live.

While many legal tech tools are built for law firms, Monet said her focus is on creators already operating as businesses but lacking access to tailored legal support – a gap that is becoming harder to ignore as deal sizes grow and contract terms become more complex.

“There’s no one-stop shop for this information,” she said. “That’s part of what we’re building.”

The launch comes as legal literacy is becoming a more visible pressure point across the sector. As previously reported by The Daily Influence, India has introduced a standardised influencer contract to bring more structure to brand partnerships, while questions around image rights and long-term usage are drawing increased scrutiny globally.

“A lot of creators are leaving money in the fine print,” Monet said. “The difference is understanding how to negotiate the contract terms – not just the content.”

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