Having one video doesn't make a career. Having ten doesn't either. A career starts when you move from sporadic posting to systematic creation.
For the first six months as babesafreak, I treated social media like a second job before it paid a single cent. Here is exactly what that looked like:
1. The Volume Play (Quality through Quantity) I committed to 30 days of posting. One Reel. One Tweet. One TikTok. Every single day. Did I run out of ideas? Yes, by day 4. But constraint breeds creativity. I started vlogging my grocery runs, ranting about bad movie sequels, and doing "Get Ready With Me" videos even though I was just going to the pharmacy.
2. The Analytics Deep Dive After 30 days, I had data. Not millions of views, but patterns. onlyfans babesafreak my first bbg
3. The Pivot Based on that data, I changed. I realized my "babesafreak" audience didn't want generic lifestyle tips. They wanted hot takes delivered with chaotic energy. So, I pivoted my career focus to commentary and humor. I stopped trying to be a "lifestyle influencer" and became a "personality."
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No story of my first social media career would be honest without mentioning the crash. Having one video doesn't make a career
By the end of year two, I hated my phone. The notifications that once felt like love now felt like a leash. I was posting 5 times a day across 4 platforms. I wasn't "babesafreak" anymore; I was a content machine. I lost my joy.
I almost quit. I actually drafted a "Goodbye" video.
But instead, I took a 2-week hiatus. I came back with boundaries: Ironically, my engagement went up
Ironically, my engagement went up. The algorithm rewards authenticity, not burnout.
If I had waited until I felt "ready" to post, I would still be waiting. The act of publishing—of putting a stake in the ground under the name "babesafreak"—forced me to learn in public. That is the fastest education there is.
The platforms do not reward "good." They reward engagement. And nothing drives engagement like a unique voice. I never fit into a neat box—gaming, beauty, tech—and that worked in my favor. I was the "wtf" category.