Creatorland Data MCP
Recipes
https://mcp.creatorland.com/mcp

Price a deal

A quoted fee goes in, a defensible verdict comes out: where the quote sits against real deals in the vertical, and what a fair counter looks like.

At a glance
Plan
Free tier.
Typical cost
5 credits per benchmark, about 13 cents at pack pricing.

The scenario

A creator, or their manager, has quoted you a number. You need to know in the next ten minutes whether it is fair, and if not, what counter you can defend with something better than a hunch. The Creatorland deal corpus is built from real brand and creator deals, so the answer comes back as a market band you can cite.

The prompt

Say this to any agent connected to the MCP at https://data-mcp.creatorland.com/mcp. Swap in your specifics and keep the shape.

The prompt

A mid-tier beauty creator quoted us $4,500 for one sponsored Instagram reel, US audience. Benchmark that against real deals in the beauty vertical: where does the quote sit in the range, and what would a defensible counter be? Show the provenance and the recency window behind every number.

What the agent composes

The ordered tool-call sequence behind the answer. This is the part you can customize: reorder it, tighten the filters, or swap a step for your own data. Every tool is documented in the tools reference.

query_market_intelligence in rate mode

The agent passes the quoted fee plus the narrowing that makes a band tight: vertical, deal type, creator tier, and a recency window. Rate mode positions the quote inside the range rather than just returning the range.

Read the band, not a point

The tool returns an aggregate benchmark as a range, with the provenance line and the recency window behind every number. The agent reads where the quote falls: below, inside, or above the band, and by how much.

Frame the counter

With the position known, the agent frames the negotiation: a counter range anchored on the band, plus the talking points, all citable because the provenance came with the numbers.

What you get

A one-look verdict: the quote positioned against the market band for that vertical, tier, and deal type, with a suggested counter range and the provenance line to cite in the reply. For a full negotiation memo, chain this recipe with your own deal context.

Gotchas and limits

Benchmarks are market-level. The band describes a vertical and tier, not a private rate card for one person. It tells you what the market pays creators like this, which is exactly what a negotiation needs.

Thin slices widen honestly. Aggregates respect minimum-sample floors. A very narrow slice returns a wider band, or says it cannot answer, rather than fabricating precision from too few deals.

Narrow deliberately. Deal type plus vertical plus tier gives the tightest useful band. Leaving everything open gives you a true but blunt range.

Mind the recency window. Rates move. The recency window is returned with every answer; quote it alongside the band so the number stays defensible.

Do it for you

Recipes are the transparent version: the prompt and the orchestration, yours to customize. If you just want the outcome, the packaged skill runs this end to end in one shot.

Price a single deal

The packaged skill for an instant fair-rate answer, plus a negotiation-memo skill when you need the full write-up.

Get the skill

Fair-rate oracle

The interactive version: try a benchmark in the browser and see how the band responds to narrowing.

Try it live