Do These 5 Things For 30 Days And Facebook Will Chase You With Monetization
Why 30 Days and What Mistake?

The Day I Realized Facebook Doesn’t Care About Feelings
I remember sitting in front of my laptop at 2:13 a.m., staring at my Facebook Insights.
My last post — a video I’d spent hours editing — had a grand total of 87 views.
Eighty-seven.
Not thousand. Not hundred.
Just eighty-seven brave souls — half of whom were probably family members who didn’t even watch till the end.
In that moment, I wanted to throw my phone, curse the algorithm, and declare Facebook officially “dead.”
But then it hit me:
Facebook wasn’t dead.
I was inconsistent.
The platform didn’t owe me attention.
The audience didn’t owe me applause.
The algorithm, that ruthless invisible judge, rewards only one thing — discipline.
That night, I stopped crying about reach and started building rhythm.
Thirty days later, the same algorithm that ignored me was now promoting me.
Why? Because I did these five things — and Facebook had no choice but to chase me with monetization.
1️⃣ Post 10–15 Times Every Day, Even When It Feels Pointless
Let me tell you a painful truth:
The algorithm loves discipline more than talent.
You can be a creative genius, a wordsmith, or a video editor so good you make Spielberg blush — but if you post once a week, Facebook will treat you like a ghost.
People say, “Quality over quantity.”
I say, “Quality through quantity.”
Because the only way to find your viral voice is to keep posting even when nobody’s clapping.
Think about it:
You post something brilliant — crickets.
Then you post a random photo of your coffee — and it hits 1 million reach.
It’s not luck. It’s math.
Facebook’s AI notices consistency, not emotion.
Every post is a lottery ticket.
The more you post, the more tickets you have in play.
Stop Waiting for Motivation
Motivation is like Wi-Fi in Lagos — unstable and unreliable.
Discipline is the cable connection — it never leaves you.
Post when you’re tired.
Post when it feels stupid.
Post when nobody is watching.
Because one day, that “boring” post you almost didn’t upload will go viral — and everyone will call you an overnight success.
Except you’ll know: it wasn’t overnight.
It was over-grind.
2️⃣ Hook in the First Two Lines
Let’s be real — nobody owes you their attention.
People scroll through Facebook faster than a politician dodging accountability.
If your first two lines don’t slap, they’re gone.
Attention is the new currency.
And every post you write is an investment pitch for two seconds of someone’s life.
You’re Not Fighting Creators — You’re Fighting for Attention
The average user sees more than 1,500 posts a day.
You’re not competing with other creators; you’re competing with memes, sports highlights, baby photos, and drama from people’s exes.
That’s why your first two lines must interrupt the scroll.
Think headlines that shock, questions that bite, or stories that pull people in.
Examples:
“I posted 500 times before anyone cared.”
“My Facebook page failed — until I did this one painful thing.”
“Your problem isn’t the algorithm. It’s your ego.”
People don’t scroll for logic; they scroll for emotion.
So write like you’re standing on stage with only five seconds before the audience walks out.
Your Hook Is Your Handshake
If your opening line doesn’t grab them by the shirt, they’ll never stay for your wisdom.
The best hooks feel like headlines from a movie trailer: short, bold, and emotionally charged.
Example:
“He posted every day for 90 days. On day 91, Facebook paid him.”
Boom.
That’s how you win the first battle — the battle for attention.
3️⃣ Use Your Face or Voice (Stop Hiding)
Faceless content works… until people stop trusting ghosts.
Look — people don’t buy from brands. They buy from humans.
And Facebook’s entire DNA is built on connection.
If people can’t see you, they can’t feel you.
The fastest way to increase your engagement is simple:
Show your face. Use your voice.
Even if your camera quality is bad.
Even if you stammer.
Even if you think you’re not “camera ready.”
Authenticity outperforms perfection every single day.
The Psychology Behind Visibility
Humans are wired for faces.
In neuroscience, there’s something called the fusiform face area — a region in your brain that lights up when you see human faces.
That’s why a selfie gets more likes than a landscape.
It’s not vanity — it’s biology.
When you hide your face, you’re robbing your audience of the emotional connection that builds trust.
And trust is the currency of monetization.
People must know who’s behind the wisdom.
When you show up — even imperfectly — your content stops being content and becomes conversation.
So step into the frame.
Speak into the mic.
Let them see the human behind the hustle.
4️⃣ Engage Back Like a Human Being
Too many creators post and vanish.
They drop a post like a grenade and disappear, hoping for likes to explode.
That’s not how social media works.
It’s social, not solo media.
Facebook pushes content that creates conversations, not monologues.
The Algorithm’s Hidden Preference
Here’s the secret no one tells you:
Facebook watches how you interact with your audience.
If you reply to comments, heart reactions, and engage back within the first hour — Facebook flags your content as “active” and pushes it to more people.
It’s like the algorithm saying,
“Oh, this creator is building community, not just clout. Let’s boost them.”
When you engage, you build a tribe — not just followers.
And tribes buy. Tribes share. Tribes remember.
Be Human, Not Robotic
Reply with warmth.
Ask questions.
Use names.
Laugh with people in your comments section.
You’re not too important to be kind.
And kindness, believe it or not, is the oldest marketing hack in human history.
5️⃣ Study, Don’t Copy
If you’re copying viral creators, Facebook already knows the original.
The algorithm can detect duplicate ideas, audio, even caption structures.
So when you mimic, you’re basically telling Facebook: “Please bury me.”
Instead of copying, study.
Study their flow, not their format.
Ask yourself: Why did this post work? What emotion did it trigger?
Then recreate that emotion, not the content.
Understand the Psychology Behind What Works
Every viral post plays with one or more of these five triggers:
- Curiosity — “What happens next?”
- Relatability — “That’s me!”
- Shock — “No way!”
- Inspiration — “I needed this.”
- Humor — “I’m sharing this.”
When you understand the why, your creativity becomes unstoppable.
Because trends fade, but principles never die.
The Facebook Algorithm Isn’t Evil — It’s Just Honest
People love to demonize the algorithm like it’s some villain sitting in a dark room deciding who gets views.
It’s not.
It’s just a mirror.
If you post often, it rewards you.
If you vanish, it forgets you.
Facebook doesn’t hate you; it just doesn’t chase lazy people.
So instead of crying about reach, outwork it.
Instead of begging for virality, earn consistency.
Remember: Facebook monetization isn’t given — it’s earned by rhythm.
The 30-Day Challenge That Changes Everything
Dear content creator,
If you’re serious about getting monetized, stop crying about the algorithm and start mastering it.
Here’s your challenge:
For the next 30 days, do these five things — without excuses:
- Post 10–15 times daily.
- Write killer hooks in the first two lines.
- Show your face or voice at least once a day.
- Engage back with every comment.
- Study viral psychology, not viral people.
Do this, and Facebook will have no choice but to recognize your page.
Why 30 Days?
Because habits take time to become identity.
After 30 days, posting won’t feel like work. It’ll feel like breathing.
You’ll stop chasing algorithms — and algorithms will start chasing you.
The Spiritual Side of Discipline
Let’s step out of data and into something deeper.
Consistency isn’t just a marketing principle — it’s a spiritual law.
Every platform, like every universe, responds to energy.
When you show up every day, you signal to the universe — and the algorithm — that you’re ready.
And readiness attracts reward.
You can’t pray for monetization and sleep through your potential.
You must show up until showing up becomes your identity.
Discipline, not dopamine, drives destiny.
The Comedy in Commitment
Let’s laugh a bit.
Because if you’ve ever posted 10 times a day, you know the struggle.
There will be days you post a quote, a photo, a meme, a prayer, a joke, and even your lunch — and nothing moves.
You’ll question your calling, your camera, and sometimes your Wi-Fi.
But then, one random post — something you created half asleep — explodes.
You’ll go viral, and suddenly people will say, “You’re so lucky.”
No, my friend.
You’re not lucky — you’re consistent.
Luck just arrived dressed as discipline.
The Monetization Mindset
Facebook’s monetization tools — Reels bonuses, in-stream ads, fan subscriptions — are not rewards for creativity; they’re rewards for consistency.
The system favors creators who feed the platform daily.
If you keep its users engaged, it keeps you paid.
The goal isn’t to post what you like.
The goal is to post what the audience loves — consistently.
Because the moment your content stops serving people, Facebook stops serving you.
Bonus Tip: Build Relationships, Not Just Reach
Monetization doesn’t just come from ads — it comes from influence.
When you build relationships, brands notice.
When you engage authentically, people trust.
The greatest algorithm hack is humanity.
Be so real that when people think of your niche, they think of you.
Be so consistent that when the algorithm updates, it still remembers your name.
Become the Algorithm
Stop chasing virality.
Start becoming the algorithm.
The algorithm rewards what you are, not what you wish to be.
If you want consistency in results, build consistency in action.
Because eventually, the algorithm doesn’t decide your fate — your habits do.
So here’s my call to you:
Comment “I’m ready for 30 days” and let’s go on this journey together.
There’s money in content creation — but only for those willing to do the dirty, difficult, daily work inside.
About the Author
Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun is a digital creator, entrepreneur, and storyteller who teaches modern creators how to turn psychology, discipline, and digital tools into profit. His work blends humor, strategy, and spirituality — helping ambitious minds master consistency in a noisy world.
About the Creator
Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun
I'm a passionate writer & blogger crafting inspiring stories from everyday life. Through vivid words and thoughtful insights, I spark conversations and ignite change—one post at a time.




Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.