Content creators: is it worth showing your face?

Im sorry if this isn’t the right sub to be asking these questions. Basically I’m thinking about starting a channel across some social media platforms about sobriety and tips etc and seeing where it could go. As a nearly 30 year old the idea of talking into a camera and potentially people I know seeing it makes me very nervous and feel a bit silly and makes me not want to do it in the first place! But I know deep down that if I had a following it would be something that I would find rewarding. So to people who create content and show your face: is the risk worth the reward? Did you get over the embarrassment?

Comments

Olivia_at_Kudzu2 months ago3

Yes! You get over the embarrassment when you start building your brand, identity, and following. Also, its normal to feel that way because you're putting yourself out there and being vulnerable. Go for it! You never know until you try it out. Authentic content featuring people always trumps any kind of graphic.

Little_kitty_28222 months ago2

For a topic as personal and sensitive as sobriety, showing your face builds a level of trust. people want to connect to a real person who has lived the experience.

BetterTelephone50012 months ago2

I think you should frame this as as a production quality consideration. You’re only worried about being seen if you give the impression of being unsuccessful. What really discourages new creators isn’t being seen, but not understanding how they’re seen. Know your lighting. Know your audio. Know your angles where you’re comfortable.

When you know that, anyone in your circle who looks at you sideways for creating content can fuck right off because they’re likely not doing shit themselves. Production quality protects you from vapid critiques because it proves you care.

You learn to reckon with any personal insecurities, because chances are the commenters will help you unlock some new ones. The things they see are rarely what you expect.

When I first started, I just thought “well I am a big guy, so fat jokes are coming” and I still think about some motherfucker who said I have t-Rex arms 12 years later

BeyondFlorida2 months ago1

I started doing that, and now people recognize me when I'm out and about! If you're looking to keep doing this and perhaps take it to the next level, it might be a necessary step. Last year I had a producer call me about a TV show but they kinda lost interest because they couldn't tell how I really looked on camera. Since then I've appeared on a few TV spots and done some interviews, helps my profile as u/olivia_at_kudzu said. You'll get used to it.

jasminusone2 months ago1

Vtubing is an option

thatsocialguy2 months ago1

the people who might quietly judge you for trying something positive and vulnerable are probably not the people whose opinions should decide your direction anyway.

Ramshaaa_sha2 months ago1

Really want to know this

Independent-Ant-72302 months ago1

For a topic like sobriety, I actually do think showing your face can matter a lot because trust and emotional connection are such a huge part of why people follow that kind of content in the first place.

And yeah, almost everyone feels embarrassed at first. Talking to a camera feels unnatural until your brain stops treating it like public performance and starts treating it like communication.

The funny thing is most people around you will care far less than you imagine. The fear usually feels biggest before posting, not after.

Also you don’t have to jump straight into full creator mode immediately. You can ease into it with voiceovers, partial face clips, storytelling videos, or gradually becoming more visible over time.

For sobriety content specifically, authenticity will probably matter more than perfect production anyway. People connect much more with someone who feels real and relatable than someone who looks overly polished.

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Far_Move27852 months ago1

Nervous about showing your face is totally valid especially with something personal like sobriety i felt that way when i started mine too and it took me weeks to hit record the first time

one thing that helped me was starting voiceover only on b roll or text slides just to get comfortable speaking without being on camera you can still build connection that way and test if you even enjoy the process

if you do want to show your face eventually try filming just for yourself first no pressure to post just talk for 60 seconds about one tip and delete it after doing that 5 times in a row makes the jump way less scary

also worth considering that your audience might actually connect more with your voice and message than your appearance especially in sober spaces where people are often just looking for real talk not polished perfection

honestly the part that keeps most people stuck is waiting to feel ready but you never will just start ugly and let the confidence come from doing not from feeling

randomly i joined the waitlist for something called Hoox recently its supposed to be an autonomous AI CMO posts daily on TikTok and Instagram to go viral daily articles for SEO traffic daily YouTube videos for AI search rankings and monitors Reddit and X 24/7 to find relevant conversations all of it compounds to get customers plus it has a Telegram AI agent that does real world tasks for you havent gotten in yet but the automation angle sounds like it could help with consistency https://joinhoox.com

what’s one tiny piece of sober advice you’d feel comfortable sharing even if your face wasnt in it?

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