This pup earns far more than you and me. Photo / Getty Images
This pup earns far more than you and me. Photo / Getty Images
Coconut Rice Bear has a follower-following ratio most influencers could only dream of and it's providing a lucrative income for the handsome Samoyed. Well, for her owner anyway.
The white four-year-old pooch has amassed 363,000 Instagram followers but her internet reach doesn't stop there.
She's also on Facebook, Twitter, hasa YouTube channel and even a TikTok profile.
"She's the queen of San Francisco," Coconut's owner Chuck Lai told the San Francisco Chronicle.
"It's strange because people think they know her. We can't walk down the street."
Lai has used the Samoyed's "playful and silly, but a little dramatic" charms to attract companies for sponsored posts.
She's been paid by a dog harness maker and even a personal finance website, earning about $150 per 10,000 followers.
Coconut's savvy business team want to limit the sponsored posts to two a month. With her followers, that means she can pocket about $5400 a post, which adds up to a staggering potential annual income just shy of $125,000.
That's about the same salary a general practitioner earns.
Coconut — well, Lai — even sells merchandise on her website with items including a poster and a calendar. A mug with a photo of Coconut running beside the Golden Gate Bridge is fetching nearly $30.
I know what you're thinking because I was thinking the same thing. My dog is obviously cuter than any other so surely I can turn a financial loss — thanks to all those trips to the vet with a gutful of sticks — into a money earner I'd otherwise need a medical doctor's degree to pocket.
But Lai says the changing Instagram algorithm makes it harder than ever to build a profitable following.
He told the San Francisco Chronicle that Instagram was still the most lucrative platform but said the video equivalent TikTok was now the easiest to grow an audience.
On the platform, you select a song to accompany your video and other users can stumble across your posts by searching for the music played.
Lai says it means you're much more likely to land in users' feeds because of this.