Published November 3, 2025
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TL;DR
The complete, no-BS blueprint for building OnlyFans models from absolute zero into differentiated brands with consistent follower growth and real revenue. Learn the exact process I've used to create millions of followers and billions of views.
If you've ever wondered how to grow an Instagram following for an OnlyFans model starting from absolute zero, this is my complete, no-BS blueprint. I'll walk you through exactly how I would take a brand-new creator—no followers, no other socials, no ads—and build her into a differentiated brand with consistent follower growth, engaged fans, and real OnlyFans revenue.
My name is Francis, and through Milki Media I've helped generate millions of followers, billions of views, and millions of dollars for OnlyFans creators and management agencies around the globe. This isn't another surface-level tutorial—this breakdown is aimed at agency owners and serious creators who want a complete system they can apply across multiple models.
Setting Expectations: The COVID Era is Over
I need to set expectations here, because I know some of you think this is going to be something like "do THESE TikTok dances with THESE viral sounds for GUARANTEED VIEWS!!!" This isn't a quick guide to scoring viral reels by copying trends, and if that's your mentality about organic social, here's the reality check you need to hear.
A lot of OFMs came up during the golden era of COVID lockdowns, when every person on earth was horny, lonely, and had nothing to do but money to burn and time to kill, and you could put a wig and some fake tits on a baboon and build a million dollar a month agency. I'm sorry to report that that era of OFM is over, and if you aren't aware of that, this guide will help reset your expectations.
Instead, I'm giving you the knowledge and processes you need to build a strong, highly differentiated brand for your models. Think of it as—I'm not giving you a recipe, I'm teaching you the principles of cooking, so you can write your own recipes.
The attention economy of today is totally different than 2019-2023 where if the girl was hot, it didn't matter what her content was about. It's INSANELY competitive, and it is only going to get more competitive over time, because everyone in the world is getting better at making content. You're not just competing for eyes, ears and clicks with other OF creators and agencies—you're competing with the entire social media ecosystem.
So this guide is a complete, structured, and principled approach to building a dedicated following for an OnlyFans creator from scratch in three parts:
First, I'll establish basic ground rules—what it actually means to start from zero.
Second, I'll explain the fundamental PRINCIPLES you HAVE to understand to build million+ follower brands from scratch for your models.
And third, I'll explain the exact process for putting those principles in action to create strong, consistent growth both in following AND revenue—basically EXACTLY how I would do it for a new model.
If you read this guide and pay attention start to finish, you are going to have a better understanding of how to crush at organic social than 99% of your competition, and you'll be able to leverage that advantage to produce results that very few other creators or agencies can come close to—over and over again.
Part 1: The Rules
Let's start with some ground rules so we're on the same page. When I say "starting from zero", here's the scenario I'm describing:
- A totally fresh Instagram account
- No secondary accounts or following from other socials that you can use to drive traffic to the page
- No using paid ads or botted followers—we are talking about 100% organic growth
In this scenario, we'll assume our hypothetical model is attractive, motivated, and ready to do whatever work it takes to win at social media, and we're going to create a go-to-market strategy from scratch and build that hypothetical model a functional, high-quality, differentiated brand that will result in consistent, sustainable follower growth, a dedicated fanbase, and most importantly, lots of revenue.
Technical Setup Process
I wasn't going to cover this but I'm sure some people are going to ask about stuff like account creation, mobile vs. web, posting on proxies, phone farms, etc.
I am not a super technical guy, and I don't know the answer to all those questions. I can only tell you exactly WHAT Milki has used to produce our results and has not failed yet—feel free to replicate it to the best of your ability, keeping in mind I do all of this on phones or computers that are physically housed in the US and my primary target is US audiences.
- Pre-make a list of some of the top and upper-mid tier creators in the niche you intend to put your model in.
- Create a Facebook page—not an account, a PAGE—for the model. You can use an existing Facebook account for this, and I recommend doing so if you can. You're not going to post on it, but this will matter for step 6.
- Create a Metricool account on any browser on any device. You'll be using this to post for the most part.
- Create Instagram account on a US iPhone 12 or later with a US sim card using an aged gmail.
- Season that Instagram by spending 15-30 minutes a day for two or three days following creators from step 1 and engaging with their posts. This is a way of priming the Instagram content delivery algorithm—it's more likely to serve you to people who follow the people you follow, and it uses that as one of the factors to determine what audience to serve your content to at first.
- Convert the Instagram account to a Creator account.
- Link the Instagram account to the Facebook page you created in step 2.
- Link the Instagram and Facebook account to Metricool and post exclusively through there.
Part 2: The Four Core Principles
Before I break down the actual process for success, we've got to start with a few core principles, starting with:
Principle 1: Brand
Brand is the foundation of everything we are about to discuss. For simplicity's sake, brand can be boiled down to two things:
- The creator's identity—their aesthetic presentation, voice, personality and ideas
- The audience's feelings towards the creator's identity
And when you combine those, you get brand.
Think about your favorite content creators. You probably started following them because you liked WHAT they had to say. But in most cases, there are lots of people saying very similar things and expressing similar opinions all the time. You KEPT following your favorite creators and began to appreciate them more because of WHO they are and HOW they said it.
A phenomenal example of a fully realized brand is someone everyone in this business knows—Andrew Tate.
In some sense, Andrew Tate is visually more or less interchangeable with other "alpha male" or "hustler"-type influencers in that ecosystem. If you scroll OnlyFans manager Instagram pages, there are an endless parade of guys wearing suits two sizes too small and standing in front of Bugattis and private jets. If all Andrew Tate had was that image and no substance, you wouldn't even know his name.
He talks about things that LOTS of other people talk about—the decline of Western society, entrepreneurship, women, etc. But it's the WAY he says it that consistently goes viral and gives him that celebrity influencer status.
He has a larger-than-life personality—he's bold, charismatic, confrontational, and at times genuinely hilarious—and as a result, EVERYONE who knows about Andrew Tate has an immediate gut response when they hear his name. Your liberal aunt HATES Andrew Tate as much as your terminally online alt-right nephew loves him. That's BRAND—his unique identity and the presentation of his ideas + the response it creates in whoever is viewing it.
Principle 2: Interest-Based Media
The next basic principle that you need to understand is that a majority of social media is now passive and interest-based. This wasn't always the case! Back when Instagram launched—and for the first 10 years of its life—it was active and search-based, meaning if you wanted to see or learn about a topic from an account you didn't follow, you had to actively search for it. That's why hashtags existed—you could "tag" your content with something like "dolphins", and if someone was searching for pictures of dolphins, your post might pop up.
Now, the software that undergirds Instagram has gotten sophisticated enough that it automatically detects the type of content you upload based on visuals, audio, and embedded text, and then automatically serves that content to the people who have demonstrated an interest in it through passive content consumption. So instead of putting #dolphin on your vacation photos in the Bahamas or whatever, now Instagram recognizes automatically that there's a dolphin in your photo and serves it to users they have identified as dolphin enthusiasts as soon as they open the app.
This is a HUGE difference, because now users aren't making conscious decisions about what they consume—they're just eating whatever slop the algorithm feeds them when they open the app. YOUR job as the creator or director is to make sure that they eat YOUR slop.
So the question is, how do we do that?
Principle 3: Niche
And the answer is through Niche. Now, you're probably thinking FRANCIS, I know what NICHE is. I don't need to hear this. But I would put money on you having no idea what it actually means to niche down, because this is probably the single most misused, misunderstood word in our entire industry.
The first definition you get from Google is: "denoting products, services, or interests that appeal to a small, specialized section of the population."
I'd say that's pretty close to perfect for our purposes. The product or service in this case is digital intimacy delivered via OnlyFans, and the market is going to be whatever subset of the demand for that service makes sense for your model. The operative word in this definition is SPECIALIZE. Because social media is now passive and interest based, the more specialized you get, the more likely you are to reach your target audience. The opposite is also true—the more generic you are, the more likely you are not to get served to anyone at all.
It might sound like I'm just arguing semantics for the sake of being pedantic. But I would be willing to bet that you have probably noticed a huge fall off in reach across many or all of your models this year, and I'm about to tell you exactly why that's happened, and how to fix it.
The reason people in our industry don't know what niche means anymore is simple: in the early days of OnlyFans, "niche" was just how you would describe the model's physical appearance. A niche could be something like big boobs, or goth, or midget, and because there was way less competition and an insane amount of demand, that actually worked for a while. But that is NOT the case anymore, and continuing to think that way is a losing proposition.
Our industry changes VERY rapidly, because the Internet is basically jet fuel for cultural acceleration. The natural progression of the internet means that even if something starts as a niche interest, over time—often quite fast—specializations within those niches develop, and what was originally a niche becomes an entire category.
For instance, think about Minecraft. When Minecraft alpha launched in 2009, there were only a few thousand players. If you made Minecraft content for YouTube, it would be accurate to say that was a niche, and you wouldn't have had much competition. But today, Minecraft has over 200 million active monthly players, and almost 2 million people have streamed Minecraft on Twitch in the last year. Calling Minecraft a niche would be like calling the entire country of Brazil a niche. It's obviously no longer an accurate descriptor.
Minecraft is now a MASSIVE CATEGORY of content, and today, a niche within that category might be something super specific, like survival mode any% speedruns on a particular seed, or 8-bit pixel art in creative mode, or something like that—I don't actually play Minecraft, not my brand of autism.
In the same way, your model's physical traits are no longer truly a niche, because the market for all physical niches is hypersaturated and ONLY going to get more saturated with AI content, and you have to get more specific and incorporate not just physical appearance, but personality and interests and skills.
Think of it this way: If you're starting a model from 0, you're competing with EVERY OTHER FEMALE ON INSTAGRAM for attention. Not just OnlyFans models—every girl who has ever posted a pic with cleavage is competing for attention with your model. And on top of that, every physical niche—from barely legal to double amputee with Down syndrome—can be flooded with AI influencers in an instant as soon as the market recognizes an opportunity.
For the sake of time, believe me when I say you can no longer rely on good looks and generic content anymore—you're GOING TO HAVE TO GET CREATIVE.
Principle 4: Differentiation and TAM (Total Addressable Market)
I'm sticking these together because they're deeply interrelated concepts.
Differentiation is something that you've almost certainly noticed or intuitively understand, but probably not spent a lot of time thinking about. So much of OnlyFans marketing "strategy"—if you can call it that—is copying trends and content from other creators. There's a time and place for that, but it's never going to get you where you want to go long term. Instead, you want to build celebrity.
It's obvious and self-evident that the best position for any business to be in is to be a monopoly producer of a good or service. Monopolies are so overpowered that in most parts of the world they're actually outlawed. It's not a coincidence that the largest companies in the world are the ones who have figured out how to skirt around these regulations—for example, NVIDIA produces over 90% of the world's discrete GPUs, and recently became the single most valuable company in the world as a direct result.
The opposite of a monopoly would be a business in an incredibly competitive industry with very low barrier to entry in terms of skill or resources. The classic example of the opposite of monopoly is a restaurant. Virtually anyone can get a loan and open a restaurant, and the instant they do so, they enter a ferocious competition with every single other restaurant within say, 10 square miles of them. Something like 20% of all restaurants fail and go out of business within their first 12 months.
So, monopoly is the goal. But how do you establish a monopoly in a market as competitive as social media? In media and creative endeavors, monopolies are established through differentiation.
A great example of this concept are character actors. Think about an actress like Helena Bonham Carter. It doesn't matter what movie she appears in, or even what decade that movie was made—you know 10000% beyond a shadow of a doubt when you see her on a movie poster that her character is going to be a creepy psycho bitch who has a really weird but oddly touching romantic attachment to the male lead.
For over 2 decades, Helena Bonham Carter had what could easily be described as a monopoly on the "psychotic goth girlfriend" role or archetype in major Hollywood productions. In fact, you could make the argument she INVENTED that archetype. THAT is the goal—you win on socials by standing out from the crowd.
So how do we determine if a niche is sufficiently differentiated for us to establish a dominant market position within it? How do we become Helena Bonham Carter instead of opening the 50,000th pizza restaurant in New York City? Total addressable market, or TAM.
TAM is a broader business concept that I'm borrowing for social media marketing because it maps really well onto this topic. It's best defined as the total revenue opportunity or total demand for a product or service IF a business captured 100% of the market. For our purposes TAM will be measured in attention, rather than dollars, since it's hard to make precise estimates of how followers translate to revenue—we're going to measure TAM with attention using followership as a metric.
The whole point of developing a brand is that it's the closest thing to establishing a monopoly within a given domain. Something like 15% of all American women aged 18-24 have made OnlyFans content. That's millions of competitors, and your goal is to stand out—to do something totally different.
If you're going after a monopoly, intuitively, you might think "well if I want to make the most possible money, I should go after the niche with the biggest TAM!"
But you CAN'T build a monopoly by starting with the biggest market, because you're going to get crushed by the existing players in that market, even if you copy exactly what they do. You could have the recipe for every McDonald's menu item, but if you try to start a McDonald's clone they're going to absolutely mop the floor with you through their functionally infinite pool of capital, economies of scale, and brand recognition. It would be like a minnow trying to eat a whale.
Instead, you want to become a big fish in a small pond. In both social media and business, you build a monopoly by identifying a tiny part of one market, figuring out what the customers in that market want, dominating that market, then leveraging what you learn and the relationship you've built with your customers—or in this case, your audience—to grow and occupy more and more space in the pond to muscle out the other fish.
You need to think of every new model like a startup, and determine what market you want to compete in. The TAM for say, "gamer egirls" is huge—probably hundreds of millions of potential fans. Amouranth, one of the biggest OF creators in that category, pulls down millions, if not tens of millions of dollars per month. But she's been doing it since 2016, she has millions of followers across half a dozen platforms, etc etc. You ABSOLUTELY CAN build that level of success with the process I'm about to share with you—but it takes YEARS of consistent effort, and you don't START there.
When starting from zero, you need to think WAY smaller. Instead of trying to tackle the entire market of "gamer egirl", you should identify a small, underserved market within that category. Maybe that's "19-year old esoteric neo-nazi egirl who exclusively reviews retro indie horror games while doing ASMR". For all I know, there are probably a handful of girls doing that already—but it will be way easier for you to create the BEST one, because you will have very few competitors.
And as you dominate that market, you can start introducing say "indie survival games", and you start picking up market share from that niche, and repeat that process, growing larger and larger, and before you know it, your model is the Helena Bonham Carter of right wing gamer egirls.
Part 3: Principles In Practice
Now you understand the fundamental principles and concepts necessary to build socials from scratch—how do we put those principles into action to build our model a brand from zero?
To make this easier to follow, we're going to build a go-to-market strategy in real time for a hypothetical model. We'll call her Alice.
We will break the process into three steps:
- Niche Selection
- Research
- Execution
Step 1: Niche Selection
Niche selection is the most critical part of this process, and it should ideally happen before you even make your first piece of content.
There are three considerations for niche selection:
- Authenticity, passion and expertise
- TAM
- Difficulty, Resource Intensiveness and Replicability
Authenticity and Passion
As I said in the previous section, Instagram is largely passive and interest based now, and the more specific of an interest you target, the more likely you are to reach that audience.
Authenticity matters a LOT here. The easiest way to reach your target audience is to understand them, and by far the easiest way to understand an audience is to BE that audience. I make my content for entrepreneurs in the digital intimacy industry because I AM an entrepreneur in the digital intimacy industry. When I got started in OnlyFans management, I had to learn everything about organic social from scratch through trial and error. So when I make content, I basically just think "What content do I wish existed when I was learning all this?"
So step one is simple: talk to the model. Figure out what she's passionate about, what she can do and/or talk about on camera for hours on end.
The obvious DREAM scenario is that your model is passionate and knowledgeable about some male-dominated niche or activity like competitive fighting games or hunting or deep-sea fishing. More likely though, your model's greatest passion is smoking weed and watching Love Island. The good news is that in the modern media world, there truly is an audience for everything. If your model can pump out entertaining, engaging content getting stoned and yapping about that week's episode of her favorite reality TV show, then God bless her, that's exactly what she should do.
For the sake of example, let's say our hypothetical model Alice really loves cooking.
TAM Analysis
As you might imagine, cooking is a MASSIVE category—after all, who doesn't love food? I asked ChatGPT to come up with a rough estimate of the aggregate TAM for all cooking content, and it came up with 1.1-1.5 billion Instagram users. It's impossible to perfectly measure TAM for socials, but the conclusion it arrived at and the methodology by which it arrived at that conclusion seemed very reasonable to me.
Now, 1.5 billion is way too big of a target to start. That's almost half of all Instagram users. That would be the same level of difficulty as getting everyone in China to follow you. So let's narrow that down substantially. I think a good rule of thumb for a category this broad is around a 5 million user TAM.
What TYPE of cooking does Alice enjoy—or, what's a type of cooking she'd like to learn? To make this simple, let's say Alice is an ex-Mormon from Utah and wants to share her passion for Mormon cuisine. Using the same methodology as the previous prompt, ChatGPT tells us that the TAM for Mormon cooking is 3-7 million—right in our sweet spot.
Strategically, Mormon cuisine works great for a number of reasons besides TAM—it's a thoroughly American cuisine, which means it will be easy to build a US audience. Ex-Mormons also have a strong predisposition towards shame and guilt-based psychosexual pathologies—in other words, they're highly susceptible to sexual messaging. It's important to consider factors like this when selecting your niche. This is why it's so beneficial to understand your target audience—you'll know all their little quirks, the language they use, etc. to present authentically as "one of them", which will deepen their relationship with the creator.
Difficulty, Resource Intensiveness and Replicability
This is an obvious, but important practical consideration.
Difficulty is how hard the content is to make, and resources are how much it costs—both in time and money—to produce it.
Alice is going to be a humble Mormon tradwife—resource wise, all she needs is a kitchen, some cookware, ingredients and a good attitude, most of which she almost certainly already has or can acquire at low cost. Most of your resource commitment will be time—cooking can be a time-consuming process, and there's a skill to capturing and editing it in a way that's engaging and visually pleasing. Overall, cooking content is on the lower end of the difficulty spectrum to produce a lot of, and you can easily supplement actual cooking with personality content or cooking humor or cooking history or something like that.
This is not true of every niche.
Your model's content strategy needs to be based around an activity or topic she can produce lots of iterations and repetitions of. Not all things are equally easy to capture on film! If your model is passionate about skydiving, that's a visually interesting, sufficiently narrow and super cool niche, but if she doesn't own a plane—or at least, she can't do it frequently enough to make it the core of her content strategy, you're probably going to have to pick something else.
So, we've picked our niche—what do we do now?
Step 2: Research
Now, we can really start digging into the specifics of Alice's niche, and what we're going to do to differentiate her from the competition.
That starts with research—and I'm going to give you the exact process I use both for Milki's past models and consulting clients.
The first thing we want to do is find the most successful Mormon cooking creators. The easiest way to do this is to put ChatGPT on either Deep Research or Thinking mode, depending on what model you're using, and use this exact prompt:
"Find, list and provide links to the Instagram pages of the most popular Mormon cooking creators on Instagram."
ChatGPT will produce a list to the best of its ability based on context like bio, news articles featuring the creators, and following count—you might not always get a perfect result on the first try, but in my experience it's very accurate and has been really on point lately now that I've performed this search a few dozen times for different niches.
Once you have that list, you're going to use Sortfeed to find the all-time most viewed content on each page and add it to a spreadsheet. If you don't know what Sortfeed is, it's a Chrome extension that allows you to sort Instagram Reels on a given page by views, and it allows you to mass-export them directly to a spreadsheet. Insanely useful tool that I use almost every day, and it costs like 40 dollars lifetime.
I like to use anything over 1 million views as a benchmark, but for smaller niches you might need to adjust to lower view counts. Rinse and repeat this process until you have a list of 250 or so Reels—then watch them.
We're doing two things here—the first is figuring out what our FORMAT is going to be. Format here just refers to the structure of our content. Since we're going to be making a lot of content, we need have a formula for reproducing it that is simple and repeatable enough for the model to do it day in and day out. You don't need to stick to a formula religiously—in fact, especially in the beginning, you need to do a lot of testing to figure out what structure works best. But once you find a winner, stick with it and improve specific elements, rather than changing the entire format.
The second thing we're doing is a practice I picked up from Rory Sutherland, which he calls "reverse benchmarking". Regular benchmarking is looking at your competitors, picking out what you like most about them, and imitating those strategies—but if you do that, you're not differentiating yourselves from them, you're just trying to compete in exactly the same way with someone who already has a superior market position. What we are trying to do is figure out what the gaps in their strategy are, what they might be doing poorly or missing out on, and go after that.
In the case of Mormon cooking, as you might imagine, it's all made by and for Mormon housewives doing standard, run-of-the-mill cooking content—a low quality, chopped up version of what you'd see on the Food Network. Figuring out how to differentiate will be easy—instead of making the same cookie-cutter content as everyone else in this niche, we're going to target male audiences by showing some skin, sprinkle in some risque jokes, and closing out every piece of content with the model serving the meal to the camera as though the viewer is her husband or boyfriend to play into that domestic fantasy.
These are tried-and-true principles I like to lean on, but the only limit on how you choose to differentiate is your own creativity.
I find it's best to let the specific creative decisions you make around differentiation be guided by your model's personality. If she's naturally funny and flirty, lean into that and have her make some off-the-cuff jokes! If she's naturally shy and reserved, play into that with lots of blushing, little giggles, and quiet, submissive overtones. Authenticity is key, because the model will be making lots of these, and the closer it is to her true personality the better.
Quick note, because I know some of you are thinking it. If your model isn't talented or interesting or has a shit personality, I've got news for you—that applies to like 90% of musicians, public figures and Hollywood actors and actresses. As long as she can take instruction, you can just make up a personality for her, which, by the way, is what the entire entertainment industry is built around. The job of a talent agent or manager in Hollywood is turning some of the most uninteresting and talentless people to ever walk the Earth into mega-stars. Have you ever seen a Jessica Alba movie? It's impossible not to notice how garbage she is at the job, but her managers and agents managed to secure her a 20-year career with multiple blockbuster titles—believe me, it can be done if you're willing to do the work.
Research should be a constant process—always be on the lookout for better hooks, small improvements to improve average watch time, etc.—but that's the important stuff for day one. At this point, you know what the competition within your niche looks like, you have a solid idea of the content format—now, it's time to execute.
Step 3: Execution
This is where all the work we just did—establishing foundational knowledge, strategizing and research—gets synthesized into actual, usable content.
Because content production is its own massive topic, I'm not going to cover the production process itself in detail—just the process you need to win.
And it's super simple—for new accounts, execution just comes down to testing stuff out. No matter how good your content plan and strategy are, ultimately, when you're starting from nothing, you won't know what works until you actually produce content. Volume is SUPER important here. The more repetitions you do, the more iterations of your primary content format you can run through, the faster you will learn what does and doesn't work.
This doesn't mean just pump out dogshit content and cross your fingers—you still need to stick to the whole strategy you developed and apply all of the psychological and structural principles that make good content. It just means the best way to learn is by doing.
So for a final concrete example, let's come back to Alice and her Mormon cooking content. What am I actually testing?
In our first 30 pieces of content, I might test:
- 10 different hooks. Cooking has a ton of cool hook opportunities—anything from your standard "Hi, I'm X and today we're cooking Y" to something more visually interesting like putting the phone in the back of the oven and sliding out the pan to reveal Alice. Get creative and play around with it.
- Whether dessert recipes perform better than dinner recipes
- If the fans enjoy it more when Alice calls them "boyfriend" or "husband"
- Uptempo music with fast cuts vs. smooth jazz with longer shots
- Any number of lighting setups, camera angles, outfits, backdrops, makeup styles
The more I'm sure that any given thing increases the likelihood that an individual piece of content performs well, the more I will ensure we replicate that thing in every reel.
This iterative process is the most important part of execution, because it's the only way you can reliably collect information about what is and isn't working. The amazing thing about socials though, is that you get that information extremely fast—you'll know if a reel hit within a day of posting in most cases. There is almost certainly a principled way to design these experiments—if you're more inclined towards mathematical rigor, I'm sure you could come up with strict performance measurement criteria, but truthfully, intuition has always worked best for me.
Once the content is shot and edited—in this case, I would have Alice batch create a month's worth of Reels so we have a decent backlog—we will start posting them on her seasoned Instagram account by scheduling them on Metricool—one per day to start, then ramping up as the model gets more comfortable.
One more thing—we will also push out one carousel a day. In this case, we'd probably do a combination of HQ photos of Alice cooking in skimpy clothes and some sexy recipe cards or something similar. Carousels are extremely underrated and a fantastic way to establish deeper relationships with followers as you grow, since they get served primarily to followers—and when Carousels do escape containment and go viral, they tend to really explode.
And that's really it! This final phase is all about experimentation—learning what works, then replicating it and improving it ad infinitum.
The Bottom Line
This is the exact process I've used to bring accounts from 0 to over 1 million followers, and BILLIONS of impressions with zero paid ads, existing socials, or other hacks. While I can't promise overnight success, I can promise that if you stick with everything I just explained, your model's following WILL grow consistently and she will develop a dedicated fanbase primed to open their wallets on OF.
The key is understanding that the COVID era of easy OFM success is over. The new era requires actual strategy, differentiation, and a deep understanding of how modern social media algorithms work. But if you're willing to put in the work and think strategically about brand building, niche selection, and content execution, you can still build multimillion dollar models from absolute zero.
The attention economy has changed, but the opportunities are still there for those smart enough to adapt.
