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A simple question like, "What’s your favorite brush?" to encourage people to talk back. 5. Using Trends (Without Losing Your Soul)
Alex used to post five times in one day and then disappear for two weeks. They switched to a sustainable schedule: . This taught the algorithm—and the audience—exactly when to expect them. 3. The 80/20 Engagement Rule how to get more followers without buying them
Alex didn't do every viral dance. Instead, they looked for and asked, "How can I make this relevant to my painting niche?" This put Alex’s content in front of thousands of new people while staying true to their brand. A simple question like, "What’s your favorite brush
Instead of trying to please everyone, Alex started posting specifically for . By narrowing the focus, Alex became the "go-to" person for a specific group of people who felt seen for the first time. 2. Consistency Over Intensity They switched to a sustainable schedule:
"If you buy them, they’re just ghosts," the mentor said. "They won't like your posts, they won't comment, and they certainly won't care about you. If you want a real community, you have to build it brick by brick."
Six months later, Alex didn’t have a million followers, but they had 5,000 people who actually cared. When Alex eventually launched a small shop, those followers were the first to buy—something a million "bought" bots would never do.
The mentor told Alex: "Social media is a conversation, not a megaphone." Alex spent 80% of their time and only 20% posting their own. By being helpful and genuine in other people’s comment sections, curious users naturally clicked back to Alex’s profile. 4. Hook, Value, and CTA Every post Alex made followed a simple formula: The Hook: A catchy first line or visual to stop the scroll. The Value: A tip, a laugh, or a relatable story.