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****Complete Guide To OnlyFans****
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*Live*

You can go live by clicking the make post button and clicking the ‘go live’ box at the bottom of the post tab. You can also access the ‘go live’ button from the top of your homepage.
Once you hit the go live button you will be brought to the live screen, which will load a preview of your default camera, which is generally your front-facing camera. 
Your screen will include an option to choose which fans you want to be able to see your livestream. You can also set a viewing price, write a description up to 500 characters, and set up a tip goal with rewards. You can choose if your earned tips are visible to fans or not. 
It's a good idea to copy your description for your life, because starting the first time is often faulty. It saves you a ton of time and anger if all you have to do is hit 'paste' instead of re-writing the whole thing. You can also do this if you have multiple tip goals, as writing em out while you are live is a pain in the butt and makes your face do terrible expressions. *I know this from personal experience. 
Once you are live, you can assign helpers from the audience to write your tip goals or descriptions. Simply tap on the number of users and a list will appear, then select the one you want and a "make a helper" button will appear as one of the options. Select this to allow the chosen fan to operate goals and descriptions. They'll remain a helper even if they leave and return. 

*Queue*

Your queue stores all your scheduled and saved for later posts. Your posts are stored in chronological order from soonest to furthest away date. After the scheduled posts the saved for later posts appear in descending chronological order from when you added them. i.e. the most recent post you saved for later appears at the top.
   At the top of your queue you can set your saved for later posts to post every 6, 12, or 24 hours after you last posted. This is great for saving time by not having to schedule posts individually, or when you know you’ll be gone for a while.

*Lists*

Lists are labels you can assign to specific fans. All fans with the same label can be easily messaged from the list page. Additionally, you can add or exclude them from mass messages. This allows you to do things like put all your $500+ spenders onto one list, then message them extra rewards. 
You can also set lists to show on your home feed. Lists you select for your feed will show every post in chronological order, instead of a curated list like the default feed.
Paid subscription accounts automatically make a list called "renew on" for your convenience. 
Some uses of lists include: marking fans that have already purchased specific content, marking spenders over a certain amount, keeping track of your active l4l, who you've done sfs with, and more. 

Vault
Fan Stats 
Page Settings 

 

Pricing:

There is no such thing as a golden pricing scheme. Every creator provides different content to a unique audience. Some creators have industry achievements and notoriety, thus can charge more for the same content. Try not to compare the quality of your content to others, but rather gauge what your fans are willing to pay for. 
The best way to confidently decide prices is to build a pricing chart. Decide what each type of content will cost per unit, and don’t stray from it unless you do something special. Never sell content for a price that makes you feel like it’s too low, and never let a client talk your price down. You are worth every bit of what you decide to charge.
Now… as for building that price chart, here are some factors to keep in mind when considering price:

Scarcity

The human brain is wired to think things in short supply are more valuable. The less of a type of content you offer in general, the more you can charge. For example, if you rarely post topless photos you can sell your topless photos for quite a lot each. If you regularly post free topless photos, the incentive to buy a topless photo will be greatly diminished. Practice supply and demand to raise the prices of your content. 
Emphasize any element of scarcity in your descriptions. If this is the first time you’ve produced this type of content, say so. If this is outside your usual offerings, say so. Find something unique about every item you sell, and play it up. Buying it is the only way they’ll get that exact thing.
Offer short sales on PPV content that entices your fans to buy now, while the scarce deal is available. Offer advanced previews, or other opportunities to buy with a very limited time frame.

Quality

High quality content isn’t necessarily high definition. High quality content is consistent with your theme, brand, and persona. The more effort you put into creating a quality experience for your fans, the more you can charge for customs and content in general.

Fame

The accolades you have to your name, the more you can charge for content. Some well-known celebrities are able to charge hundreds for a single video. 
If you have no following raise your prices slowly over time.

Audience

Different audiences are just simply willing to pay to more than others. If you are unsure what audiences pay in your niche, look up artists creating similar content and see what they charge.

Niche

In general, the more niche content is, the more buyers will pay for it. Specialized fetish content and customs are usually the most profitable content creators provide. To raise your prices on all content, try to work in common niches like bare feet into your content to appeal to these higher-paying niche audiences.

 

Use the above factors to create a rough price map of what you’ll charge for different types of content. Make sure to include things like nudity level, price per minute, and extras like fetish outfits or custom audio.  

Troubleshooting:

If you think you've followed all the steps above but you're still having trouble making money, this section *might* be for you. 

No one is buying your premium subscription 

Exposure is always key, and when you have a premium page it can be hard for fans to really gauge your content. Here are some things I recommend to increase success:
Have a free page with previews. 
The best way to lure fans into paying for your premium content is to… show them a preview. Having a page with censored previews lets fans get a taste without paying, and it allows fans that can't afford to pay every month to continue following you. As a bonus, fans find it normal and acceptable to send semi-regular PPV on free pages– this gives you more chances to sell. 
Make sure your bio and pics are poppin'. 
When a fan comes to your page all they can see is your profile picture, header image and bio. They see a small section, usually around 64 characters or less, and they have to expand your text to read more. If those first few words aren't captivating, they may leave. Choose a catchy intro that fits your personality and grabs attention. 
Make sure your profile clearly represents you. Choose a picture that showcases your best features that you frequently show, I.e. Big boobs, large smile, booty, etc. 
You have 5 seconds to make an impression that lasts a lifetime, make it count. 
In my personal experience, censored lingerie or nudes do best as headers. Onlyfans bans nudity, so I recommend risqué lingerie picks with censoring over the good bits. 
Next, list what you offer very clearly. Remember someone else is about to buy you as a product. Sell yourself. If you're having trouble coming up with your keywords, look at similar creators. For example– "BBW, kawaii goth with DDDs and a huge heart."
If you want, you can list specific fetishes, but what you really want is to condense yourself into a few keywords and say "HEY WORLD!? I'M THIS AND I'M SELLING THIS AND YOU SHOULD BUY IT!" 
It's key to remember that depending on where your viewers are coming from, you may have drastically different click through rates. For example, if your potential subscribers are coming directly from your personalized website, their subscription rate will be pretty high, maybe even 1 in 3, though more likely, somewhere between 1 in 10 and 1 in 100 for personal sources. 
For promotional sources your subscription rate will be MUCH lower. If for example, your promote on Twitter threads, your click subscription rate could be dismissally low, like 1 in 1000 or more. This is because you're targeting a very wide audience. Most people that click your link won't even be willing to pay anything to any creator, they're just curious what they can get for free. 
There's no right or wrong way to promote. Most creators in the top 500 pay for some amount of promotion, myself included. Exposure is the name of the game. 
If you're an all-out porn creator, your best bet will generally be as many eyeballs as possible. The more niche your content, the more you'll want to focus on quality over quantity when it comes to advertising and attracting eyeballs.

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