The Creator Playbook Goes Corporate: The TikTok-ification of everything

March 1, 2026

On April 30, 2026, Netflix rolled out "Clips," a personalized, swipeable, vertical video feed inside its mobile app. The company pitched it as a curated highlight reel to help members decide what to watch next without endless scrolling.

Five years ago, the wave of TikTok clones was easy to dismiss as a passing imitation cycle. But today, it has become the prerequisite for attention; LinkedIn, sports leagues, retailers, CPG brands, and now streamers have all converged on the same interface, and on the same distribution logic.

This is what the creator playbook looks like: vertical, personalized, and scalable.

Streaming and broadcast

The pattern across "big streaming" in 2026 is consistent:

build a TikTok style discovery layer inside an app originally designed for the living room designed to meet viewers where they're at.

Netflix

Netflix Clips ships as a discovery tool. It's an in-app highlight reel of trailers and moments from existing originals. CTO Elizabeth Stone has been explicit that Netflix isn't trying to be TikTok. It's trying to solve the discovery problem TikTok exposed.

Netflix Clips, launched April, 2026. Image: Netflix

Disney+

Disney+ is following close behind. At CES 2026, the company announced plans to roll out Verts. The new feed is expected to mix original short form content, repurposed social clips, and scenes adapted from existing films and series.

Disney Verts, launched March, 2026. Image: Disney+

Peacock and Tubi

Peacock and Tubi have added their own vertical surfaces, with Tubi's "Scenes" feature live since 2024.

Tubi Scenes, launched November, 2024. Image: Tubi

Fox

Fox Entertainment launched Fox Creator Studios, a digital first division that partners directly with creators on formats and IP, opening with food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly, Sorted Food, Food Theorists, and Little Remy Food.

The legacy distribution moat, owning the home screen, the cable bundle, the linear schedule, has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds. If the streamer can't surface its own content in a format the audience already prefers, the audience will find something else inside TikTok or Shorts that they like just as much.

Company Product Launched Content type
Tubi Scenes 2024 Short clips from movies and TV shows
Peacock Can’t Miss Clips 2025 Highlights and can’t-miss moments
Netflix Clips April 2026 Trailers, moments from originals
Disney+ Verts March 2026 Original short form content, repurposed social clips, and adapted scenes.
Fox Entertainment Fox Creator Studios Later 2026 Food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly etc.

The legacy distribution moat has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds.

Publishers and revenue

If streamers are playing defense on attention, publishers are playing offense on ad dollars.

TIME and Media.net
Time has partnered with ad-tech platform Media.net to embed vertical video on nearly every article page. Time's COO Mark Howard has framed video advertising as the publisher's biggest growth driver heading into 2026.
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst are testing a similar format, internally referred to as "Bytes", across different placements and designs.
Recurrent Ventures
Recurrent Ventures has reported that essentially all of its growth now sits in video and experiential content.

If publishers can match creator economy ad formats with creator economy content surfaces, they can recapture some of the spend that has been migrating to TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Whether the audience returns the visit is a separate question, but the inventory has to exist before the dollars can.

What these examples have in common: the operating principles

Across streaming, publishing, professional networking, and CPG, the same set of principles keeps surfacing. Together, they read as a working definition of the creator playbook applied at corporate scale.

01

Build the vertical surface inside your own product

Netflix Clips, Disney+'s upcoming feed, Tubi Scenes, LinkedIn's video tab, and Time's "Bytes" are all the same thing: a 9:16 feed embedded inside an app the company already owns.

02

Treat distribution as the algorithm

The era of linear schedules and curated homepages is over. Personalized feeds have taken their place, and they need far more content to function.

03

Native voice beats production value

Audiences and algorithms punish content that feels overproduced, generic, or obviously synthetic. What wins is AI for speed paired with a specific, imperfect, human voice.


The real story of vertical video in 2026 is which companies are willing to take on the operating model that built TikTok: small autonomous teams, native voice, and scale.

The creator playbook is the content strategy of the decade. The brands willing to actually run it are the ones everyone else will be studying in 2027 and beyond.

Learn more about the OpusClip Business Plan

Join now

On this page

Use our Free Forever Plan

Find the moment. Skip the scrubbing.

From script to polished video — in one click.

Learn more about the OpusClip Business Plan

Create and post one short video every day for free, and grow faster.

OpusSearch uses AI to surface the exact clip you need from hours of footage — in seconds, not afternoons.

Agent Opus runs the entire video pipeline for you: research, scriptwriting, storyboarding, motion, voice, and edit. Upload the idea, post the result.

The Creator Playbook Goes Corporate: The TikTok-ification of everything

On April 30, 2026, Netflix rolled out "Clips," a personalized, swipeable, vertical video feed inside its mobile app. The company pitched it as a curated highlight reel to help members decide what to watch next without endless scrolling.

Five years ago, the wave of TikTok clones was easy to dismiss as a passing imitation cycle. But today, it has become the prerequisite for attention; LinkedIn, sports leagues, retailers, CPG brands, and now streamers have all converged on the same interface, and on the same distribution logic.

This is what the creator playbook looks like: vertical, personalized, and scalable.

Streaming and broadcast

The pattern across "big streaming" in 2026 is consistent:

build a TikTok style discovery layer inside an app originally designed for the living room designed to meet viewers where they're at.

Netflix

Netflix Clips ships as a discovery tool. It's an in-app highlight reel of trailers and moments from existing originals. CTO Elizabeth Stone has been explicit that Netflix isn't trying to be TikTok. It's trying to solve the discovery problem TikTok exposed.

Netflix Clips, launched April, 2026. Image: Netflix

Disney+

Disney+ is following close behind. At CES 2026, the company announced plans to roll out Verts. The new feed is expected to mix original short form content, repurposed social clips, and scenes adapted from existing films and series.

Disney Verts, launched March, 2026. Image: Disney+

Peacock and Tubi

Peacock and Tubi have added their own vertical surfaces, with Tubi's "Scenes" feature live since 2024.

Tubi Scenes, launched November, 2024. Image: Tubi

Fox

Fox Entertainment launched Fox Creator Studios, a digital first division that partners directly with creators on formats and IP, opening with food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly, Sorted Food, Food Theorists, and Little Remy Food.

The legacy distribution moat, owning the home screen, the cable bundle, the linear schedule, has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds. If the streamer can't surface its own content in a format the audience already prefers, the audience will find something else inside TikTok or Shorts that they like just as much.

Company Product Launched Content type
Tubi Scenes 2024 Short clips from movies and TV shows
Peacock Can’t Miss Clips 2025 Highlights and can’t-miss moments
Netflix Clips April 2026 Trailers, moments from originals
Disney+ Verts March 2026 Original short form content, repurposed social clips, and adapted scenes.
Fox Entertainment Fox Creator Studios Later 2026 Food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly etc.

The legacy distribution moat has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds.

Publishers and revenue

If streamers are playing defense on attention, publishers are playing offense on ad dollars.

TIME and Media.net
Time has partnered with ad-tech platform Media.net to embed vertical video on nearly every article page. Time's COO Mark Howard has framed video advertising as the publisher's biggest growth driver heading into 2026.
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst are testing a similar format, internally referred to as "Bytes", across different placements and designs.
Recurrent Ventures
Recurrent Ventures has reported that essentially all of its growth now sits in video and experiential content.

If publishers can match creator economy ad formats with creator economy content surfaces, they can recapture some of the spend that has been migrating to TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Whether the audience returns the visit is a separate question, but the inventory has to exist before the dollars can.

What these examples have in common: the operating principles

Across streaming, publishing, professional networking, and CPG, the same set of principles keeps surfacing. Together, they read as a working definition of the creator playbook applied at corporate scale.

01

Build the vertical surface inside your own product

Netflix Clips, Disney+'s upcoming feed, Tubi Scenes, LinkedIn's video tab, and Time's "Bytes" are all the same thing: a 9:16 feed embedded inside an app the company already owns.

02

Treat distribution as the algorithm

The era of linear schedules and curated homepages is over. Personalized feeds have taken their place, and they need far more content to function.

03

Native voice beats production value

Audiences and algorithms punish content that feels overproduced, generic, or obviously synthetic. What wins is AI for speed paired with a specific, imperfect, human voice.


The real story of vertical video in 2026 is which companies are willing to take on the operating model that built TikTok: small autonomous teams, native voice, and scale.

The creator playbook is the content strategy of the decade. The brands willing to actually run it are the ones everyone else will be studying in 2027 and beyond.

Learn more about the OpusClip Business Plan

Join now

Creator name

Creator type

Team size

Channels

linkYouTubefacebookXTikTok

Pain point

Time to see positive ROI

About the creator

Don't miss these

47K to 300K: How Dr. Nick Turns Research Into $15K Clients
No items found.

47K to 300K: How Dr. Nick Turns Research Into $15K Clients

How Audacy Drove 1B+ Views by Taking a Tech-Forward Approach to Radio with OpusClip
No items found.

How Audacy Drove 1B+ Views by Taking a Tech-Forward Approach to Radio with OpusClip

How creators are earning 10M+ views in 1 month using video clipping
No items found.

How creators are earning 10M+ views in 1 month using video clipping

The Creator Playbook Goes Corporate: The TikTok-ification of everything

No items found.
No items found.

Boost your social media growth with OpusClip

Create and post one short video every day for your social media and grow faster.

The Creator Playbook Goes Corporate: The TikTok-ification of everything

On April 30, 2026, Netflix rolled out "Clips," a personalized, swipeable, vertical video feed inside its mobile app. The company pitched it as a curated highlight reel to help members decide what to watch next without endless scrolling.

Five years ago, the wave of TikTok clones was easy to dismiss as a passing imitation cycle. But today, it has become the prerequisite for attention; LinkedIn, sports leagues, retailers, CPG brands, and now streamers have all converged on the same interface, and on the same distribution logic.

This is what the creator playbook looks like: vertical, personalized, and scalable.

Streaming and broadcast

The pattern across "big streaming" in 2026 is consistent:

build a TikTok style discovery layer inside an app originally designed for the living room designed to meet viewers where they're at.

Netflix

Netflix Clips ships as a discovery tool. It's an in-app highlight reel of trailers and moments from existing originals. CTO Elizabeth Stone has been explicit that Netflix isn't trying to be TikTok. It's trying to solve the discovery problem TikTok exposed.

Netflix Clips, launched April, 2026. Image: Netflix

Disney+

Disney+ is following close behind. At CES 2026, the company announced plans to roll out Verts. The new feed is expected to mix original short form content, repurposed social clips, and scenes adapted from existing films and series.

Disney Verts, launched March, 2026. Image: Disney+

Peacock and Tubi

Peacock and Tubi have added their own vertical surfaces, with Tubi's "Scenes" feature live since 2024.

Tubi Scenes, launched November, 2024. Image: Tubi

Fox

Fox Entertainment launched Fox Creator Studios, a digital first division that partners directly with creators on formats and IP, opening with food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly, Sorted Food, Food Theorists, and Little Remy Food.

The legacy distribution moat, owning the home screen, the cable bundle, the linear schedule, has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds. If the streamer can't surface its own content in a format the audience already prefers, the audience will find something else inside TikTok or Shorts that they like just as much.

Company Product Launched Content type
Tubi Scenes 2024 Short clips from movies and TV shows
Peacock Can’t Miss Clips 2025 Highlights and can’t-miss moments
Netflix Clips April 2026 Trailers, moments from originals
Disney+ Verts March 2026 Original short form content, repurposed social clips, and adapted scenes.
Fox Entertainment Fox Creator Studios Later 2026 Food content from Gordon Ramsay, Rosanna Pansino, Jolly etc.

The legacy distribution moat has been eroded by viewers who now spend hours a day inside vertical feeds.

Publishers and revenue

If streamers are playing defense on attention, publishers are playing offense on ad dollars.

TIME and Media.net
Time has partnered with ad-tech platform Media.net to embed vertical video on nearly every article page. Time's COO Mark Howard has framed video advertising as the publisher's biggest growth driver heading into 2026.
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst
People Inc., TMB, and Hearst are testing a similar format, internally referred to as "Bytes", across different placements and designs.
Recurrent Ventures
Recurrent Ventures has reported that essentially all of its growth now sits in video and experiential content.

If publishers can match creator economy ad formats with creator economy content surfaces, they can recapture some of the spend that has been migrating to TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Whether the audience returns the visit is a separate question, but the inventory has to exist before the dollars can.

What these examples have in common: the operating principles

Across streaming, publishing, professional networking, and CPG, the same set of principles keeps surfacing. Together, they read as a working definition of the creator playbook applied at corporate scale.

01

Build the vertical surface inside your own product

Netflix Clips, Disney+'s upcoming feed, Tubi Scenes, LinkedIn's video tab, and Time's "Bytes" are all the same thing: a 9:16 feed embedded inside an app the company already owns.

02

Treat distribution as the algorithm

The era of linear schedules and curated homepages is over. Personalized feeds have taken their place, and they need far more content to function.

03

Native voice beats production value

Audiences and algorithms punish content that feels overproduced, generic, or obviously synthetic. What wins is AI for speed paired with a specific, imperfect, human voice.


The real story of vertical video in 2026 is which companies are willing to take on the operating model that built TikTok: small autonomous teams, native voice, and scale.

The creator playbook is the content strategy of the decade. The brands willing to actually run it are the ones everyone else will be studying in 2027 and beyond.

Learn more about the OpusClip Business Plan

Join now

Ready to start streaming differently?

Opus is completely FREE for one year for all private beta users. You can get access to all our premium features during this period. We also offer free support for production, studio design, and content repurposing to help you grow.
Join the beta
Limited spots remaining

Try OPUS today

Try Opus Studio

Make your live stream your Magnum Opus