If you manage creator marketing for more than one brand (because you're an agency, a fractional marketing lead, or part of a portfolio company), Scoop supports this through Managed Organization mode. You get a single account that can switch between the brands you've been granted access to, without having to sign out and back in or maintain separate emails.
Managed Organization mode
In Managed Organization mode, you have one user account that can be assigned to multiple brands. Each brand gives you access on their side and you show up in their team list as an account manager. From your side, you see all the brands you have access to in a single brand picker at the top-left of the app.
Switching is instant. You click the brand picker, choose a different brand, and the entire app updates to show that brand's projects, creators, deals, and reports. Data never crosses between brands, so you can't accidentally show one client's strategy to another.
How a brand assigns you
A brand admin invites you the same way they'd invite a normal teammate, but they pick the account manager role during invite. The flow is:
The brand admin opens their team settings and invites you by email, choosing the account-manager role.
You receive the invite. If you already have a Scoop account, you accept and the brand is added to your brand picker. If you're new, you create your account first, then accept.
The brand admin approves your access.
The brand now appears in your brand picker the next time you sign in.
You can be assigned to as many brands as you need. Each one shows up in the picker with the brand's name and logo so you can switch confidently.
What account managers can and can't do
Account managers have nearly full access to the brands they're assigned to. You can:
Run discovery, build folders, and label creators
Send outreach and negotiate deals
Review drafts and verify content
See performance reports and dashboards
Communicate with creators in the deal thread
There are some restrictions on payment actions for account-manager users. The brand owner keeps final say on certain financial operations to protect each brand's funds. This means you might be able to set up the payment milestones in a deal but the brand owner needs to mark the actual payment as paid.
If you find you need to do something a payment restriction is blocking, the right move is to coordinate with the brand owner rather than trying to find a workaround.
Switching context cleanly
When you switch brands, take a moment to confirm which brand you're in before you take action. The brand picker shows the current brand prominently in the top-left, and it's a habit worth building before you send outreach, accept a deal, or message a creator.
If you have multiple browser tabs open with different brands, the tabs maintain their separate context, so you can keep one brand in one tab and another brand in another tab without bleed.
Owning multiple brands directly
If you're not an account manager but you actually own multiple brands (for example, you run two D2C companies under one roof), the current setup is to use the Managed Organization flow and assign yourself as the account manager on each brand.
A dedicated multi-brand owner switcher (for users who own brands directly rather than through a managed setup) is on the Scoop roadmap. In the meantime, the account-manager pattern works well as long as you're aware of the payment-action restrictions.
