Setting up your model profile

Your profile decides who clicks into your room. Most viewers spend 1–3 seconds on a thumbnail and another 5–10 seconds on the profile preview before they decide whether to enter. The right profile turns that into a follow; the wrong one loses them.

The hierarchy

Visitors see your profile in this order, from most-eyed to least:

  1. Hero photo / live thumbnail — when you're live, your live preview replaces the hero. When offline, the hero photo decides almost everything.
  2. Display name — under the hero. Keep it short, distinctive, easy to type.
  3. One-line tagline — sits under the name. Treat it like a movie poster tagline. "Bookworm, bilingual, and bored", "Latina with a music degree and bad ideas", whatever you want it to convey.
  4. Tags — gender, body type, languages, kinks, interests. We strongly recommend at least 8 tags. Sparse tag sets mean fewer search results match you.
  5. Photos — a small gallery, around 6–12 photos. Mix of close-up, full body, and personality (with cats / books / cocktails / costumes — whatever's you).
  6. Bio — up to 600 characters. Most read 100 words and stop.
  7. Schedule, prices, fan-club tease — below the fold but important to regulars.

Photos that work

  • Hero: bright, sharp, you-looking-at-camera. Not an over-edited glamour shot; viewers see through filters in seconds.
  • Variety: full body, face, action, costume. Don't make all 12 photos the same vibe.
  • Personality: at least one photo of you doing something — reading, gaming, with a pet, mid-laugh. These convert better than pure glamour every time.
  • No copyrighted images: if you didn't take it, don't post it. Stock photos are fine if you bought the licence; movie stills and other models' work are not.

Tagline craft

  • Lead with one specific detail. "Architect by day", "five tattoos and counting", "bilingual and tired".
  • Avoid clichés ("Your dream girl" / "Princess waiting for her king"). Every newbie writes them, regulars scroll past them.
  • Short = better. 8 words beats 16.

Bio that earns you regulars

  • The first sentence is most of what's read — make it the strongest.
  • Talk like a person, not a profile. "I'm doing a chemistry PhD and stream while procrastinating on my thesis" is more memorable than "I am a friendly girl who loves to chat".
  • Mention what you don't do, briefly. Setting expectations early saves both sides time.
  • End with a hook to your fan club or a custom-content offer. Viewers who scrolled all the way down are buyers.

Schedule

Set your weekly schedule in the model dashboard and we'll show it on your profile. Viewers strongly prefer models with predictable schedules — they plan their evenings around favourites. Even if your schedule is "Tuesday and Thursday evenings, Saturday all day", post it; the structure helps.

Pricing

There's a platform floor (so prices stay sustainable for everyone) but otherwise pricing is yours. Three suggestions:

  • Start at the floor for the first 30 days. Build follows first, raise later.
  • Reserve premium prices for premium offerings (custom content, exclusive private, fan club). The base public chat is free; that's how viewers find you.
  • Watch the analytics in your dashboard — we show you which prices viewers click off and which ones convert.

A profile that's never finished

Your profile isn't a one-shot setup. The top-earning models on Camila tweak their hero photo every month, refresh tags weekly, and rewrite their bio every quarter. Treat it as ongoing.

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