MANDY&SAM

They Deleted 380,000 Followers on Purpose. Here is What That Taught Them About Building Something Real.

April 17, 20267 min read

Sam Rossi and Mandy Lyttle did not find community through a networking event or a mutual friend. They found it through the internet, doing what the internet occasionally does: pointing the right people toward each other twice.

MANDY&SAM

A coach at a Scottsdale gym stumbled across an Instagram reel that asked a simple question: What interesting businesses do you know that are not boring? He tagged Sam in the comments. Then someone else sent it to her directly. When the same thing reaches you twice, Sam says, you pay attention.

That is how they ended up in a conversation that eventually turned into a business partnership, a community, and a podcast. But the more interesting story is everything that happened before.

The account that got deleted

Sam started making content five years ago on YouTube. She did not have a niche figured out, just a willingness to experiment. Then Ricky Gervais did his Golden Globes speech, and she posted a reaction video. A lot of the jokes went over her head, which her comment section was happy to point out. But the video became the second-most-viewed reaction to that speech, and in that mess of mockery, she realized something: she could build an audience. The channel evolved into a reaction channel focused on Bollywood and Indian culture, and she grew it to 270,000 subscribers.

Then she deleted it.

“If you built it once, you know you can build it again. The followers were never the point.”

She has done this more than once. A TikTok account with 380,000 followers, gone. Multiple large accounts were voluntarily wiped. People think it is reckless. She thinks of it as proof.

Mandy’s entry into content was louder and harder. She started posting seriously in 2023, and one of her earliest videos to get real traction was about homelessness. The reaction was immediate and overwhelming and not kind. Famous pages made response videos. There were Reddit threads. She sat in her closet and cried. And then she decided: this is either the moment you go all in, or it is the moment you quit.

She did not quit.

What they had to unlearn

The thing they keep coming back to, talking about their work, is how much they have had to unlearn.

Sam paid someone $8,000 a month for a year to handle her content. A professional. Ten years of experience. She handed over her accounts and let him run them. The day they stopped working together, her content started performing better. Because it was actually her again. There is no shortcut for that. You can outsource the production, but you cannot outsource the person.

They also ran an experiment once where they spent a month producing a year’s worth of content with a whole team. Planned, scheduled, structured. It flopped. The content that works for them is still the stuff they make in the moment because something happened, or they learned something, or they are just feeling it.

Mandy put it plainly: she posts a TikTok in two minutes. That is not laziness. That is years of figuring out that the polished version is usually the worst version.

MANDY&SAM

The brother and sister who changed their lives quietly

There is a story Sam tells about a brother and sister who took their 28 day paid to exist challenge. They did not participate in the community. They did not really communicate. Sam did not even know if they were doing it right. Then four months later, she got a message: they had both quit their jobs. Their page was thriving. They had clients.

She did not know they were doing the work. They just were.

That is the kind of thing that makes this feel worth it, Sam says. Not the follower count. Not the metrics. The part where someone’s life actually changed, and you did not even know you were part of it yet.

Jigsaw puzzles, moving states, and first five-figure months

Both of them grew up watching their parents work jobs that paid just enough. Sam waitressed at Famous Dave’s in Peoria after moving to Arizona for a relationship that ended three months after she arrived. She found a sales course on Facebook, maxed out a credit card to pay for it, and started figuring out what she was actually capable of. It was not a straight line. There were years of self-sabotage, failed income streams, and chasing the next thing.

The turning point came on a random afternoon when she had no money, and all she wanted to do was do a jigsaw puzzle. She had been putting it off for years because it felt unproductive. She did the puzzle anyway. Rain coming through the window, tea, puzzle pieces. And in that moment, she finally asked her partner, Andre, who had built his own company by then, to help her. She had never asked before.

He told her he had been waiting for her to ask.

Weeks later, she had her first five-figure month.

Mandy’s version was more abrupt. She found Sam online, felt immediately that this was someone who could actually show her how to build something real, and moved from California to Arizona with no backup plan. She broke up with her boyfriend the same day she decided to leave. Did not renew her massage therapy license. Burned some bridges on purpose.

She had her first client within a week.

The advice that is not complicated

Stop watching other people’s content if you want to make good content. Not because you cannot learn from others, but because the comparison rabbit hole kills your originality faster than anything else. The creative material you need is already inside you. The more you fill the space with everyone else’s output, the harder it is to hear your own.

When you do post, do not imagine you are talking to an audience. Talk to yourself. Sam wrote an entire book that way, just telling herself what she needed to hear at that moment in her life. People still reach out about it because it was real. Because it was specific. Because it was not trying to perform for anyone.

And when you are having a terrible day? Post about it. Sam sent a video to her email list where she was crying on camera, admitting she felt stuck, admitting she had forgotten everything she had learned. She thought it might ruin her business. Instead, seven people wrote her back with long, thoughtful emails. Not because misery performs well, but because honesty does.

MANDY&SAM

The metric that actually matters

They do not obsess over follower counts. They have seen enough to know that 200 engaged people who trust you are worth more than a million passive ones. The metric they actually care about is whether someone reached out. Whether something landed. Whether a person felt less alone after watching.

That is the thing they keep circling back to, underneath all the strategy and the content frameworks and the business talk. Community. Not as a growth hack. As a reason to keep going.

Sam talks about going around a coffee shop and saying hello to everyone on her first day there. Two people responded as she had actually seen them for the first time in a while. One gave her a gift card. One wrote her a note. That is not content. That is just what happens when you treat people like they matter.

The followers will come or they will not. The account can always be rebuilt. The part that is harder to manufacture is the willingness to just keep showing up as yourself, including on the days when that self is tired and confused and doing the puzzle anyway.

That is the plan. Or the closest thing to one.


About me:

I am currently a Master Facilitator for The Elliott Group in addition to being on the board of advisors for our Cultural Transformation Department in ELLIOTT ARMY.

With over 14 years of client service experience, I have held substantial leadership roles in the automotive industry. I’m also an accredited coach, a writer, a speaker, and a triathlon finisher. To contact me for engagements, you can reach me at [email protected].

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