Some cases don't lack strategy.
They lack a clean foundation to build on.
By Angels Miami arrived with numbers that didn't add up. Thousands of followers, but content generating no real interaction. Active ad campaigns, but with leads coming from other states — or other countries. Continuous effort, inconsistent results.
The diagnosis was clear from the first analysis: someone had bought followers. And that decision, made at some point to inflate the numbers, was ruining everything built on top of it.
By Angels is a beauty salon chain with locations across different areas of Miami. A brand with a real product, committed team, and satisfied clients — but with a digital presence that reflected none of that.
The problem had three layers:
Layer 1 — Contaminated community. A significant portion of the followers were fake or spam accounts. That silently destroys organic reach: Instagram shows content to that ghost audience, measures that no one interacts, and reduces distribution. Genuine content gets buried.
Layer 2 — Poorly segmented ads. Active campaigns were bringing messages from people outside the service areas. Real leads in number, but commercially useless. Budget spent on the wrong audience.
Layer 3 — Content without system. Published material had no logic connecting the pieces or a clear flow toward booking.
Before building, we had to clean.
The first step was auditing and manually removing spam and inactive accounts. A tedious but non-negotiable process: without that clean base, any new content would have the same problem.
We completely redefined Meta Ads audiences. Precise geographic radius by each salon location, segmentation by real behaviors and interests of Miami premium salon clients, and campaign separation by objective — branding, bookings, and chair rental leads for independent stylists.
We trained each salon's managers to capture content in the workspace: real moments, transformations, the salon atmosphere. That material came to Plan Media and we edited it strategically for each platform — Instagram, Facebook, TikTok — with the right tone and format for each.
We activated the stylists themselves as content creators. Their transformations, their work, their clients (with consent). That generated genuine engagement — the salon's real audience interacting with real faces they recognized.
Booking acquisition ads with precise local targeting. Separate ads for stylists interested in chair rental. Two distinct audiences, two distinct messages, two distinct ad sets.
The numbers improved. Interaction grew. Campaigns started bringing leads from the right areas.
But the result that most defines this case isn't a metric. It's continuity.
Three years later, we're still working together.
In an industry where agency turnover is high and clients switch providers every six months chasing faster results, three years of sustained relationship says something very specific: the work works, trust was built, and the system has roots.
"When the foundation is broken, the problem isn't that you need more content. The problem is that everything you build on top of it inherits the fracture." — Eze Garcia, Plan Media
Before investing more in content or ads, it's worth understanding what's happening with the foundation.
→ Book a strategic conversation and let's analyze it together.