A real, unfiltered look at a 48-day TikTok experiment — the formula, the follow-ups, the ghosting, the wins, and every number behind $14,379 earned.
Who's behind this report
Founder & CEO of Dream Creative & Co. LLC. A queer Afro-Latina Business Systems Coach and Fractional COO, a proud cat mom, and book nerd who brings that same love and loyalty to every client she serves.
With 16 years of coaching experience, Jennifer founded Dream Creative & Co. LLC to help female founders and CEOs stop being the bottleneck in their own businesses. She believes the right systems are what turn a brilliant idea into a scalable legacy.
As the daughter of an immigrant, she knows what it means to build something from nothing — and she's on a mission to make sure founders have the tools they need to simplify their systems and finally get some rest.
A 47% workload cut for one founder-led wellness business — recovering $375K in annual opportunity cost through SOPs, workflow automation, and a redesigned tech stack.
See the full case studies →What's inside
Skim the dashboards or read it cover to cover — every chart, every lesson, every number is in here.
Campaign at a glance
One screen, every key result — followed by 36 more pages of the story behind them.
The arc
A daily TikTok challenge plus a strategic warm-lead outreach engine — about 4 contacts a day, every day.
Where I started
Those dates changed throughout the challenge from May 1, to May 15, to the end of the challenge which was officially on May 20.
I started the challenge on April 2, and with it ending on May 20, the 30-day challenge really ended up becoming a 48-day challenge.
The challenge begins.
Goal date kept moving.
48 days, one mission.
Why I did this
I was pleased to see if I could make any new connections on TikTok — my visibility and following — through exposure therapy to get rid of my fear of being seen and known.
Where the idea came from
I was motivated by a video from another TikToker where she totaled up her engagement and multiplied it times 0.02 to determine how much money she should pay down on her newly purchased car. That got my wheels turning.
The math that started it all
If I could encourage engagement at the same time, it would also help me stay accountable — no matter how small the views, likes, shares and follows. I realized I could total those up, multiply times 0.02, and get a single or two-digit number that seemed attainable for pitching my services.
Strategic targeting
I specialize in operational systems support — so I started with the warmest possible audience.
The warm pool
Combined across every channel and my newsletter list — a real, ready-to-reach warm pool.
The 5 sources of the pool
Five sources, one ready-to-reach pool.
The tool
I used this exact tracker and organized every lead so I knew who to reach out to next.
[Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
My day
Most days, I started my day with reaching out to leads — anywhere from 9am to 2:30pm — then the rest of my day was just focusing on my business and admin.
5.5 hours focused on warm-lead outreach.
The rest of the day for everything else.
152 contacts ÷ 48 days ≈ 4 a day.
The video formula
Each day had a very predictable video script that you can access [here with the other resources] [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish].
Shortening to no more than 30 seconds helped increase viewing.
I strategically removed all the ums, uhs, and breaths between my audio.
Some days I'd pick b-roll and do a voice over — these were days I was getting ready to go on vacation.
I can show you exactly how I do that here [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish].
What I'd tell a friend
So that people can start to know your content and you can start earning trust with your audience. It's okay to post multiple videos in one sitting especially if you want to break up topics or share different topics using the same outfit and back drop.
Social media, especially TikTok, is a place for authenticity and realness.
For following up, check when the last person responded to you — that's most likely the time they have free every week. Try to contact them back during the same time they responded to you to see if that helps!
April 2 → May 20
A visual sweep across the challenge — eight milestones, one mission.
TikTok stills gallery — every day of the 48-day challenge
Every chart and every number, exactly as they came in.
14 / 42The money
From 9 clients booked, with 1 client cancelled — including a $12K booking that came from this very report.
Campaign + halo
The receipts — during the campaign
Total results — at the end
A 5.92% conversion to yes, a 27% explicit no rate, and a long tail of silence that became the most important lesson of all.
Top of funnel to booked
Plus 92 silent contacts — people who never replied. That's the gap the next iteration of the pipeline will need to address.
Campaign conversion rate
152 people contacted. 9 booked (including the post-campaign halo client). Here's how that stacks up against industry benchmarks for warm outreach to high-ticket coaching.
9 booked ÷ 152 contacted
60 replies ÷ 152 contacted
9 yes ÷ 60 who actually responded
Benchmark check — how 5.92% stacks up
Industry average for cold B2B email / DM to no prior audience.
My 5.92% lands solidly in the upper half for warm outreach to existing audience.
Warm outreach by sellers with strong brand trust and a refined pipeline.
Among the 60 people who actually replied, I closed 15%. High-ticket coaching close rates from qualified responders typically land between 10 – 25% — and I'm sitting solidly inside that band. The headroom is in pushing more maybes off the fence and reducing ghost-rate (61% of contacts never replied).
The follow-up reality
Two different ranges, both from this campaign. The maybes took longer — but even the yesses took a steady stream of check-ins before they booked.
Follow-up for each maybe has taken anywhere from 11 to 53 touch points, reminder texts and check-ins.
On average, every booked client took 10 to 43 touch points (check-ins) before they finally said yes and booked.
The maybes
I realized for some they stayed in the maybe category. And this is because after I introduced my service to them, the follow up just took so long. And I'm talking 11 to 20 times messaging them or calling them to see if they're still interested in working with me.
Through this time I discovered a problem that people have around their systems or even just healthy boundaries that protect them in conversations.
"Maybes" weren't a "no" — they were "I can't bear to tell you the truth right now."
The ghosting section
People had a very difficult time telling me no and would ghost me after discovering that they possibly couldn't afford my services.
That brought up a lot about shame and the idea that as a business owner, they should have all their shit together — but they don't, and they're afraid for me to see.
I have an email that I sent out for people who have ghosted me, but in this journey when I used it, only one responded — and they returned very offended by my response.
The shame insight
"It's like being a house cleaner and asking folks if they want me to clean their house, but they're too ashamed to let me in. I found this happening a lot with clients."
Even when they need the support, the fear of being "seen messy" wins.
Without judgement. Without pressure. With a way out that still keeps the door open.
The gap I found
Also, I realized a gap in my pipeline process. I don't have the best strategy for when people ghost me.
I have an email that I sent out for people who have ghosted me, but in this journey when I used it, only one responded and they returned very offended by my response.
What this means
April 2 – May 20
Daily videos, every one of them counted. Here's how views landed across the run.
Sample of the daily view counts pulled directly from the campaign — visible in the line above. Some days hit 300+; some days hit 179. Both still count.
Likes, comments, shares, saves
Overall profile — Apr 2 to May 20
The full-profile picture — every video, not just the daily challenge clips.
Profile engagement
Where viewers came from
Viewers — Apr 2 to May 20
86.7% of the viewers were people seeing me for the first time. That's exposure therapy in action.
New viewers as a share of total
Gender split
A strong female-led audience that matches the women business owners I love serving.
Age demographics
Together, 80.7% of my audience is in their prime years for hiring a business coach.
When they showed up
Most active day of the entire campaign: Wednesday, May 20, between 5pm and 6pm.
Between 5pm – 6pm. Peak hour: 478 viewers at 5pm.
Followers — Apr 2 to May 20
10 vs. 9
Also, in a very real sense, the original goal of 10 sat just out of reach. I booked eight clients inside the 48-day window — and a ninth came in post-campaign from the halo of this very report. One client shy of the original 10.
Perhaps that gap could have been closed by focusing on the maybes and pushing them along to a clear answer — but as stated, follow up for each maybe has taken anywhere from 11 to 53 touch points, reminder texts, and check-ins.
The wins
$14,379 in real revenue. Real engagements.
152 conversations I wouldn't have otherwise had.
8,668 of them brand new to my brand.
"I booked clients! I met so many new business owners! And I expanded my reach around how many people were coming to know my services and my brand."
Lesson one
I need to find a way to bring people through a smoother pipeline — one that I think would deal with the issues of uncertainty or shame.
I'm asking 152 people to work with me — I realized this pipeline could be a smoother transition post-challenge. I'll link it here with the other resources from this report.
[Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
What "smoother" looks like
Lesson two
Some days, you won't feel like showing up on camera — and that's 1000% okay. Just have a back-up plan ready to go: something you can still post that's low effort but gets the information out there.
During this process I remembered the importance of taking breaks, listening to my nervous system, and finding the right rhythms that work for me (i.e. I do NOT work weekends).
A low-effort post you can drop on a hard day — text-on-screen, a repurposed clip, a screenshot, a quote.
If your body says "not today," take the day. Breaks are part of the work — not the opposite of it.
Find the cadence that's sustainable. For me: M–F only. The campaign still worked.
Last thoughts
I highly recommend setting out a goal, using the same formula, and having a plan and schedule for how you'll post.
"Setting out a goal + using the formula + a plan and schedule = the lift-off."
If you're going to try this
Hire a dedicated Social Media Content Creator to edit your posts, and a Social Media Manager to schedule them and help you respond to comments.
Get used to hearing no — it's going to happen a lot, and people are even going to forget that you exist. But you have to keep up with your touch points.
Figure out your exact pipeline before you start this challenge — know where you're going and how you're going to get your client there.
Follow Up. Follow Up. Follow Up!
The vault
The exact tracker I used to organize every lead. [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
Access here with the other resources. [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
Exactly how I do it. [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
The refined pipeline I'm building next. [Insert link to Social to Sales Tutorial Vault: How to run a $2K 30-Day TikTok challenge from start to finish]
The bonus boost
Turns out, my 30-day challenge boosted my overall profile engagement. When I wasn't posting about the challenge, I would post short reels — 56 to be exact — that were non-campaign update posts between April 2 – May 20. Some talking-head reels, some just b-rolls, some trending-sound reels, plus tons of new engagement on my pinned videos from 2025.
After the 48-day window closed, someone read this report — the data, the lessons, the receipts — and signed on for a $12,000 engagement. The campaign kept paying long after the last day.
Posted in the same window.
48 days end-to-end.
On top of the daily campaign video.
The mix of non-campaign content
Direct-to-camera takes between the daily updates.
Day-in-the-life footage with voiceover.
Riding the algorithm wave on trending audio.
Tons of new engagement on my pinned posts.
The challenge gave the algorithm a reason to show up daily — and that consistency lifted everything else. The talking-head reels, the b-roll, the trending sounds, and even pinned videos from 2025 all picked up momentum because the profile was suddenly active. Consistency creates a flywheel.
48 days. 152 conversations. 9 yesses. $14,379. And every lesson I picked up on the way — yours to use.
Now go ask.