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Currently trying to come back from a disabled account for content being to suggestive. I cleaned everything up and then get a few to no subscribers...

Summary

I understand how exhausting it feels to chase a US audience after a sudden Instagram ban, especially when the algorithm keeps pulling in viewers from regions that don’t convert. Your experience shows that chasing raw numbers can drain you, and it may be time to rethink what “growth” truly means for your brand.

How Should I Filter Out Non‑Converting Followers?

I keep getting followers from Brazil, India, and Turkey on a reel that I deliberately excluded those regions from, and I’m torn between blocking them or letting them stay. The platform’s algorithm seems to ignore my exclusion list, pushing the reel to anyone whose behavior matches my existing followers, even if they are overseas. Deleting those accounts feels satisfying but may also remove potential genuine fans who happen to be from those countries. How can I reliably prune the audience so my effort translates into real engagement and revenue?

Faraway fans join

They watch, yet still never buy

Focus on true fans

What SEO Tactics Can Attract Real US Followers?

When I tag my posts with “USA,” collaborate with American brands, and use location tags, Instagram still surfaces the content to non‑US users who share similar interests. I wonder if there are specific keyword strategies, caption structures, or posting times that can force the algorithm to stay within the United States. Could focusing on niche US‑centric hashtags, geo‑targeted ads, or partnership tags help keep the reach domestic? What concrete steps can I take to train the system to serve my reel only to US viewers who are likely to subscribe?

US hearts need to see

Clear tags pull the right crowd near

Real fans follow back

When Is It Worth Deleting Low‑Value Followers?

I’m exhausted from constantly monitoring follower origins and wondering at what point the emotional cost outweighs any benefit. If a follower never interacts, never clicks my links, and never purchases from my OnlyFans, does keeping them hurt my brand more than help? Is there a simple rule of thumb — like a 30‑day inactivity threshold or a conversion‑rate benchmark — that can guide me to cut the noise and protect my mental health while still growing a loyal US community?

Counting each name now

But only true fans stay still

Growth needs real roots deep

Concluding Questions

When choosing a new partnership platform, should I prioritize Xlove/xlovecam because it guarantees US‑focused traffic that converts?