Hi Abby, let me help you a bit:
The most important part: read. every. group's. info!!
I know it's a pain in the ass at first, but you need to know if you're allowed to post or not (account age, enough karma or verification).
Don't post if you don't meet these requirements, it will get taken down and you'll most likely receive a ban.
So, depending on your account (at least if it's a newer one and has no karma) try to find a lot of feet groups. They usually allow new accounts and you get a decent amount of karma there.
Post DAILY in EVERY group, but don't spam the same pictures over and over. Use different ones & rotate them. Never use the same picture in the same group, it will get taken down.
After a few weeks, search for the big groups and make verification pictures (they explain what they want and need) and there you go, you can now post in them too.
I know this is a lot of work, but you really need to learn what each group wants from you. But trust me, it will reward you if you stay consistent.
If you have more questions or need more help just DM me
โ Cassie ๐งก
Hi Abby, let me help you a bit:
The most important part: read. every. group's. info!!
I know it's a pain in the ass at first, but you need to know if you're allowed to post or not (account age, enough karma or verification).
Don't post if you don't meet these requirements, it will get taken down and you'll most likely receive a ban.
So, depending on your account (at least if it's a newer one and has no karma) try to find a lot of feet groups. They usually allow new accounts and you get a decent amount of karma there.
Post DAILY in EVERY group, but don't spam the same pictures over and over. Use different ones & rotate them. Never use the same picture in the same group, it will get taken down.
After a few weeks, search for the big groups and make verification pictures (they explain what they want and need) and there you go, you can now post in them too.
I know this is a lot of work, but you really need to learn what each group wants from you. But trust me, it will reward you if you stay consistent.
If you have more questions or need more help just DM me
๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ Cassie ๐งก
The Mindset Shift That Changes Everything ๐
Posting every day feels productive. It feels like you're working, like you're doing the thing, like you're earning your income. That feeling is real, but it's not correlated with your bank balance.
The creators making serious money have separated activity from output. They're not measuring success by how many times they posted this week. They're measuring it by revenue per subscriber, PPV open rates, and repeat purchase behavior.
When you stop trying to fill every day with content, and start thinking about what each piece of content is supposed to do - who it's for, what it should make them feel, what action it should lead to โ your whole relationship with the platform changes.
And usually, so does your income :)
SO, like always: feel free to reach out to us. Questions are welcome, DMs are always open. Wishing you a great start into the week!
โ Cassie๐งก
https://t.co/TEXjikwRFd
What the Right Posting Rhythm Actually Looks Like:
There's no universal perfect schedule, but there are principles that hold across niches and follower counts:
3 to 4 posts per week is the sustainable sweet spot for most creators. Enough to stay top of mind, not so much that each post loses its weight.
PPV works best when it feels personal, not scheduled. The fans who spend the most aren't responding to a content calendar โ they're responding to the feeling that you thought of them specifically. A PPV that comes out of a real conversation converts at a completely different rate than one that lands in their inbox on autopilot.
Dead days aren't dead if you're in DMs. A day with no post is a perfect day to do 30 minutes of genuine DM engagement with your most active subscribers. That interaction compounds into tips, customs, and loyalty in ways that a daily post never will.
Batch create, drip release. Shoot content in sessions, not every day. A 2-hour content session once or twice a week produces better material than 30 minutes daily, and your mental state during a dedicated session is completely different from the "I need to post something" panic at 11pm.. yes.. we've also been there with our models haha
What now:
(7/7) The Honest Summary
The gap between $500 and $10k comes down to four things:
Knowing your audience โ specifically who's spending, what they respond to, and treating that knowledge as a business asset
Monetizing depth, not just breadth โ revenue per subscriber matters more than subscriber count, especially early on
Charging correctly โ not apologetically, not speculatively, but based on clear value and without discounting for the wrong reasons
Operating like a business โ tracking, planning, funneling, reinvesting
None of these require a bigger audience. None of them require better-looking content. All of them are learnable, and all of them compound over time.
The ceiling isn't where most creators think it is. The floor, unfortunately, is exactly where underestimating these things leaves you.
If you made it this far, I hope you could take one or two things with you to learn and grow :)
Also, if you're putting in the work and think we could be a good fit, feel free to reach out. Questions are welcome too, DMs are always open ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ
โ Cassie
https://t.co/TEXjikwRFd
(6/7) Where the Market Is Right Now and What It Means for You ๐
The overall spend on creator platforms hasn't shrunk. If anything, it's grown. But it's distributed differently than it was two or three years ago.
Early OF was like a gold rush โ novelty alone drove subscriptions. That period is over. Subscribers today are more experienced. They've been on the platform, they've spent money before, they know what they like and what they don't. They're harder to acquire and easier to lose.
What that means: the money is still there, but it's moved to creators who provide something more specific than "access to explicit content." The broad "come see my content" pitch is increasingly undifferentiated in a market with hundreds of thousands of creators.
What actually wins now is specificity and relationship. A creator with a clear identity, a vibe, an aesthetic, a type of engagement that feels distinct, who actively maintains relationships with her best subscribers, consistently outperforms a technically superior creator who treats her page as a content upload hub.
The creators who understood this shift early are the ones at $10k+. The ones who haven't are often stuck wondering why their content isn't "good enough," when the content was never the main variable to begin with.