I have a question because I want to start twitch streaming. Undzwar my question would be from when people can subscribe to me. Do I need a certain number of followers, or how is that?
Click on yours
Picture above right,
then on creator dashboard,
and then on Achievements.
From then, when you have the "way to the affiliate" managed.
It is possible to become an affiliate if you…
has at least 50 followers
… And within the last 30 days…
streamed for at least 500 minutes,
Streamed on 7 different days,
averaged at least 3 spectators.
You can look at the Achievements in the Dashboard to see the progress on the "Path to Affiliate" achievement, if that applies to you.
https://www.twitch.tv/...hievements
============
Who is qualified to participate in the program?
We're looking for streamers who are not yet partners, but at least
Have 50 followers and in the last 30 days at least
500 total minutes transmitted, seven individual transmission days and an average of three simultaneous viewers or more. As the program evolves, these criteria may change.
Invitation and registration
Sufficiently qualified streamers will be invited by email, notification and an announcement in the dashboard. Invitations will continue to be sent on a rolling basis as new streamers qualify for the program. Once a streamer has been invited, a new section will appear on the Settings tab that will allow the streamer to register for the affiliate program and enable bits!
https://affiliate.twitch.tv/de-de/
First, Twitch looks for streamers that have at least 50 followers. Like https://praxistipps.chip.de/...ipps_37982, you can read about it in one of our articles.
It is also important that you have at least 500 minutes transferred on seven individual days in the last 30 days.
Twitch also checks if your stream has at least three or more viewers at once.
Participation in the affiliate program is completely free for you.
Remember - it has to be real viewers and not bots, which unfortunately are 'human' on Twitch'normals.
And do not think that you can 'grow up' quickly. Most 'newcomers' have very bad cards to get regular viewers at all times. So it's a rather demotivizing thing that requires a lot of stamina and a 'strong will' to last for many months without any spectators.
Oops I was probably a little late to send my contribution - double post I'm not so on it - please excuse my (double) contribution. : ^)