I recently wrote about hitting 20,000 followers on LinkedIn and what comes next. In that article, I shared that Threads would be my next frontier, and now, I want to share why and how I plan to make it so.
After years of posting within a structured framework on LinkedIn, I started wondering what would happen if I loosened the rules. I’ve tested formats, frequency, and monetization, but always through the lens of performance. I didn’t want to move into a new phase of growth using the same tactics. What if I treated content less like a system to optimize and more like a sandbox to play in?
And so, the Proof of Concept series was born, and with it, my first experiment: growing from 366 to 1,000 followers on Threads in three months through organic effort, curiosity, and consistency.
Unlike LinkedIn, Threads still feels like an open field. The playbook isn’t written yet. Posts travel less by polish and more by presence — by joining conversations, responding quickly, and showing up like a person, not a brand. It’s the perfect place to relearn what experimentation feels like.
Why Threads (and why now)?
LinkedIn taught me how to build authority; Threads is where I’m trying to reclaim my creativity.
Threads feels like a reset — informal enough to experiment without overthinking, yet active enough to test ideas fast.
Plus, Threads mirrors where social media is heading: toward smaller, faster spaces that reward participation over perfection. I’m tapping into the excitement around Threads from other creators who are actively growing on the platform.
View on Threads
I don’t know yet who my Threads audience will be, but that’s part of the appeal. I want to experiment across my interests — from remote work to brand partnerships to the simple aesthetic things I take pleasure in every day (like sharing my lunches or pictures from my travels).
This isn’t the first time I’m using Threads as a testing ground, either. The last time I focused on the platform nearly a year ago — which I documented in this article — I learned a lot about the power of conversation on the platform.
This time around, I’m not aiming for virality, just testing what happens when I post like myself without the pressure of showing expertise.
⚡Much of the advice in How to Get More Followers on Threads is powering my approach, so I recommend you check out the article!
Setting the ground rules
Despite the lack of structure in my actual posts, the experiment needs some guardrails and milestones. So here’s what I’ve landed on:
- Follower starting point: 366 followers on Threads (431 as of writing this article)
- Goal: Reach 1,000 by December 15, 2025.
- Cadence: One scheduled post every day (powered by our best time to post data, of course), plus spontaneous posts when inspiration hits.
- Focus: 100% organic — no ads, no follow-for-follow, no automation.
- Time investment: About 20 minutes daily, split between writing, posting, and engaging with others.
- Measurement: Weekly check-ins on follower growth, replies per post, and conversation quality (not just likes).
Beyond the numbers, I’ll also track how it feels — whether posting this way sparks joy or starts to feel like an obligation.
The plan
Threads isn’t a place for perfect niches. It rewards multidimensional creators who show up as themselves — and that’s exactly what I plan to lean into.
Determine my content pillars
Here’s what I’ll post about:
- Remote work: Reflections, tools, and habits from working globally.
- Life as a beginner content creator: Documenting my growth on Threads in real time.
- LinkedIn content creation: Lessons I’m translating from a more polished platform.
- Creator growth: Experiments, learnings, and what consistency actually builds.
- Content marketing: Behind-the-scenes from Buffer — frameworks, campaigns, and storytelling.
- Brand partnerships: What I’ve learned from collaborations, approvals, and creative briefs.
- Productivity: Systems, fitness, and routines that make all of the above possible.
⚡ I documented my approach to figuring out content pillars in How To Create Content Pillars For Social Media
Commit to a daily rhythm of scheduled and spontaneous posts
Structure keeps me consistent**,** while flexibility keeps me creative. So I’m mixing both — one scheduled post daily (anchored in my content pillars) and spontaneous posts whenever inspiration strikes.
- Scheduled posts: Keeps me grounded with a consistent rhythm of insights and reflections.
- Spontaneous posts: Keeps me curious — quick thoughts, visuals, or random questions that spark conversations.
Engagement as a growth lever
Threads runs on conversation, not broadcasting — so engagement is the real growth engine.
Here’s my approach:
- Join 5 to 10 conversations daily: Add thoughtful comments and questions that move discussions forward.
- Prioritize replies over reach: Comments drive discovery, so I’ll respond to every meaningful reply.
- Use tags intentionally: Explore and contribute to relevant communities through tags like #RemoteWork or #Creators.
- Cross-promote with care: Share standout Threads moments to Instagram or LinkedIn to invite deeper connection.
- Collaborate naturally: Co-create ideas with other creators or build off shared themes in public.
If my LinkedIn growth came from consistency, I suspect Threads growth will come from curiosity.
The month-by-month approach
Month 1: Discovery
This month is about exploration.
I’ll post daily across all my pillars, track which formats and topics gain traction, and start identifying patterns — the kind of content that sparks replies, shares, or follows.
By the end of the month, I want a clearer sense of my audience, top-performing topics, and ideal posting times.
Goal: reach 500 to 600 followers, but more importantly, gather enough data to refine my focus.
Month 2: Refinement
This is where I’ll narrow in.
I’ll double down on the pillars that resonated most in Month 1 and start introducing recurring formats. Maybe a weekly “Threads Journal” where I reflect on growth lessons, or a recurring visual series tied to my lifestyle posts.
I’ll also lean into conversations — replying to other creators more intentionally, joining trends, and testing features like polls or tags more actively.
Goal: reach 800 followers and establish a recognizable content rhythm.
Month 3: Acceleration
By Month 3, the goal is to scale what works.
That means doubling down on proven formats, collaborating with others, and sharing meta-reflections about the journey — the very posts that will later become How I Grew to 1,000 Followers on Threads.
I’ll experiment with “open thread” prompts to build community (“Drop your current content challenge — I’ll share what’s working for me”) and test cross-platform engagement by sharing a few of my best Threads moments elsewhere.
Goal: hit 1,000 followers — and capture the insights that matter most for the next Proof of Concept installment.
Anticipated challenges
Every experiment sounds neat on paper. The real test is what happens in week three, when the novelty wears off and the algorithms start behaving differently.
A few things I’m already anticipating:
- Creative fatigue. Posting daily will test my ability to stay inspired. I’m planning to batch-write a few posts during high-energy days, so I have something to fall back on when I’m not feeling as creative.
- Finding my Threads “voice.” On LinkedIn, I know exactly how to write for that audience. Threads feels looser — less professional, more conversational — and it’ll take some trial and error to find the right rhythm.
- Balancing work and play. Because I also write about social media for Buffer, the line between experimenting and analyzing can blur quickly. I want to protect this space as a creative outlet, not a content lab.
- Platform unpredictability. Threads is still evolving. Features shift and visibility fluctuates (courtesy of The Algorithm). My goal is to stay adaptable and treat every change as another data point in the experiment.
What I’m hoping to learn
Every platform teaches you something new about being a creator.
LinkedIn taught me the value of structure and consistency. Threads, I hope, will teach me how to stay creative without overthinking — to post from curiosity, not performance. I want to see what happens when growth isn’t engineered but discovered in real time.
Through this experiment, I’m looking to understand:
- Which types of posts invite genuine conversation, not just engagement.
- How different formats — text, visuals, and video — thrive in a more experimental ecosystem.
- Whether consistency still wins when creativity leads.
- How community on Threads grows differently from LinkedIn — slower, deeper, or just more human.
When I hit 20,000 followers on LinkedIn, it felt like the end of one story — proof that deliberate systems work. Starting over on Threads feels like the beginning of another: a reminder that expertise is only valuable if you’re still willing to be a beginner.
Curiosity and experimentation built my first audience. I hope to tap into that feeling again — posting without pressure, learning in public, and rediscovering the fun in showing up just because I want to.
If you want to follow along, you can find me on Threads @tamioladipo. I’ll be sharing updates — the wins, the misses, and the metrics — as I try to grow to 1,000 followers by the end of the year.
And when I get there, you’ll find the full breakdown right here in my next article in the series: “How I Grew to 1,000 Followers on Threads.”
Other articles in the Proof of Concept series
📖 I Reached 20,000 Followers on LinkedIn and I Feel Weird About It
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