I have a spreadsheet on how to boost their social media presences. I'm trying to build up my business enough so I can retire and do only social-media management and coaching for people who need it
In the future, I want to keep my own pages going, but I want to move more into coaching and social-media masterclasses. My whole day revolves around social media. In the evening, my nights are usually open because I do my sexting sessions during the evening. I go over my Instagram, then film my customs because I usually have a list of them I need to do. I have a personal-training session for an hour there, during which time I go live on TikTok and Instagram because it's a good way to funnel people onto your other social-media platforms.Īfter that, I come home and produce a bunch of TikToks to post during the week. I post that, then go to breakfast, and usually I go to the gym at 11 a.m. I log in, make a good-morning post and do a video where I say: "Hey, good morning, what are you up to?" I tell them about my day. I check all my emails and post on all my social-media platforms. I wake up in the morning and have meetings. At the end of the day, they're there to support you, so you have to cater to them. I try to do a little bit of what I like but also cater to what my fans want. I'm very able to understand what my fans want to see. I make $750,000 a year from OnlyFans now that I've recognized that. They talk to you about their fantasies, and you can do it for them, with custom videos produced for a fee. It's also about doing a lot of custom content, where someone can say: "I want you in high heels wearing this" or "I want you baking a cake." Your fans are interested in what you're doing on a daily basis.
It's not about cranking out massive amounts of content every day. OnlyFans isn't a platform like PornHub with only videos.
One of the key things I've realized over the past two years is that the type of content you make can make a huge difference. I'm constantly on my phone finding different ways to make it more interesting for my fans.īut I want to build my business to be more than just OnlyFans I want to help other women succeed on social media as well. Netflix : You're scrolling through the same shows every day and think, "Oh, I wish they had something new." Your customers have to have something interesting to look at. That's something you need to do every couple of months or so. She'll see what you're doing compared with hers and make a plan, suggesting what you can try to change. Zoom call with the coach, who will go onto your page and analyze it. The coaching usually involves booking a Skype or I'd estimate I've spent maybe $200,000 to $300,000 on promotion and coaching. I've pumped a lot of money into growing my business. I still buy coaching from girls who know what they're doing. I also bought a lot of organized coaching from girls who are really big on OnlyFans, like Dannii Harwood, which helped. I joined Telegram, which is really a useful way to find new and interesting ways to use your page. I knew during the pandemic a lot of people had lost their jobs.Ī lot of girls couldn't be dancers because the clubs were closed. I decided I wanted to build this, to make a lot of money but also to educate and help other women. Each month it grew, but when the pandemic hit, that's when everything explodedīack then, I was making more than $100,000 a year. I started small, with maybe 2,000 followers, and I was working hard on it. So I started working hard on my OnlyFans account. Then I decided I didn't want to do dancing anymore because it's very tiring, and I was really depressed doing it. Nothing happened for the first year or two. I thought, "Should I put work into this?" You never know if it's going to be anything. My fans were asking if I was going to join this new platform. In 2016, when OnlyFans started, I already had a pretty big Instagram account. When I moved from Sweden to the United States, I was a dancer for three years. Insider has verified Huldt's financial claims with documentation. This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Monica Huldt, a 38-year-old OnlyFans creator about building her presence on the platform.