Tips on growing a TikTok account?

I feel like I've followed most of the advice I've been given. I've found a very niche community that doesn't have oversaturated content as of yet, I try to start my videos with a good opening shot and a hook, and I try to post several times a day. The problem is, when posting up to 3 times a day, I'm running out of content and ideas quickly. And some of these videos I've put a lot of time filming and editing into and I can't afford to let them flop, so they're just sitting in my drafts until I have a "bigger audience" to see it. I feel like the content I post now is just filler until I can post what I actually want to make. My account is growing but it's still rather small and I would like to possibly get to the point of monetization.

Comments

salarshah-0842 months ago2

one of the biggest traps on TikTok is treating your best ideas as something to save for later In reality, strong content is usually what creates the audience in the first place

Far_Move27852 months ago1

Hm yeah posting 3 times a day on TikTok is a lot when you're doing it all yourself, especially if you're filming and editing everything. that grind burns people out fast no matter how good the niche is

the videos in your drafts aren't wasted though, you're building a library. what if you took those same clips and just chopped them differently? one 60-second video can become 3-4 different 15-second hooks by changing the intro text or trimming the middle. same footage, way less work

also worth looking at what's actually working in your niche right now. not what people say should work, but what's getting views in the last 2 weeks. copy the format, not the topic. same editing style, same text-on-screen timing, just swap in your niche angle

honestly the real fix isn't more content, it's smarter remixing. film in batches once a week, then spend 10 minutes a day making variations instead of starting from scratch. keeps the pipeline full without the daily creative drain

randomly i joined the waitlist for something called Hoox recently, it's supposed to be an autonomous AI CMO. posts daily on TikTok and Instagram to go viral, daily SEO articles for traffic, YouTube videos for AI search rankings, and monitors Reddit and X 24/7 to find conversations and get you traffic. all of it compounds together to build a customer-getting system, plus it has a Telegram AI agent that does real-world tasks for you. https://joinhoox.com

how many of those draft videos are just sitting there untouched right now? and have you tried just posting them raw without over-editing to see what actually sticks?

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HitxLerr2 months ago1

Real talk, automation platforms become deeply embedded in your workflow surprisingly fast lol. Once the systems, reporting, and team habits are built around them, switching later can feel like rebuilding the company from scratch. Using Ahrefs for search intent, Notion for strategy organization, and Runable for campaign pages and stakeholder reports honestly sounds like a strong lean setup for keeping operations efficient. Tbh, automating the production and formatting layer is one of the biggest leverage points because it frees the team to focus on positioning, nurturing, and actual growth strategy instead of repetitive execution work fr.

Prasanth77992 months ago1

Runable-style repetition actually works on TikTok sometimes because audiences rarely see every post you make.

No-Perspective8722 months ago1

Embrace a content style that is easy to make, searchable, and memorable.

MongooseItchy29002 months ago1

I’ve been trying to grow a TikTok account over the last few weeks and kept getting stuck at low views, so I decided to test different content formats that are trending right now.

Instead of guessing, I posted consistently and tracked which types of videos actually performed better.

Here are a few that surprisingly worked:

  1. “Nobody talks about this…”

These did way better than expected. The more honest and slightly uncomfortable the topic, the higher the watch time.

  1. Expectation vs Reality (short version)

Super simple but effective. The key is making it fast (under 10 seconds) and a bit exaggerated.

What didn’t work (for me at least):

• Over edited videos

• Trying to be too “perfect”

• Posting without a strong hook in the first 2 seconds

I put together all 10 ideas I tested with examples/hooks so I don’t forget them and reuse them later.

If you want it, I can share it.

ryanstrikesback2 months ago1

TikTok is cooked, just fyi 

Polish_Girlz2 months ago1

Oh I understand. You should never put too much work into your short form!

Maximum-Education1172 months ago1

I wish I could figure out how to grow my followers over any of my social media accounts. I know once I crack the code I’ll be soaring but sometimes I just want to give up

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3 months ago
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Any people that runs 100 to 10k followers pages (any social media)?

Hey all, I own a business that involves many clients that promote their product, art or website with TikTok (also Instagram, Youtube and Facebook). I want to offer them a way to post their content, or to get content created and posted for them on existing TikTok pages. Basically you got pages in a specific theme (sport, anime, cinema, culture, memes...) and you rent it for a specific period of time. You get paid every month, and all you have to do is basically connecting the account once to our system. You can opt-out anytime you want, you keep the full ownership of the account. That's basically a way to monetize your pages passively. For now I'm doing it myself with my own pages (3 tiktok pages with 500 to 3k followers, and 1 6k subscribers Youtube channel), I made around $800 renting these for less than a month. If someone is interested, please comment or DM!

3 months ago
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Everything dying at 300 views for so long before I finally caught the problem

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4 months ago
221