A survey conducted informally across social media on 23 Feb 2024 (n≈500 respondents) found:

The leak of adult content from high-profile OnlyFans creators highlights ongoing challenges in digital privacy and copyright enforcement. On February 24, 2023, explicit material featuring the popular verified content creators known as Clark and Martha—specifically a highly searched "threesome" video—was widely circulated across third-party piracy websites and cyberlockers. This incident underscores the systemic vulnerabilities adult performers face regarding unauthorized content distribution. The Mechanics of Content Leaks

On the same Saturday morning, Marcus posted a 60-second video on LinkedIn analyzing a new AI feature from Adobe. He tagged three colleagues with constructive credit. That post was seen by a VP who had been searching for "AI-curious content" for two weeks. Marcus was headhunted for a director-level position and started the role in May 2023.

To effectively leverage social media for career progression, professionals must deploy a structured, repeatable content workflow.

Consider the case of "Alex" (a pseudonym used in a Harvard Business Review case study published on 02/23/24). Alex, a mid-level marketing analyst, was laid off on February 1. Instead of applying to 200 jobs, Alex posted one 90-second video every day for 23 days breaking down marketing ROI fallacies. On February 24, Alex had seven interviews. By March 1, Alex had a 40% raise.

However, scrolling through the same feeds revealed significant career pitfalls:

You cannot treat every platform the same. Here is the cheat sheet validated by the post-Feb 23 algorithm changes.

scrolltotop