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Case study: How an indie UK beauty brand turned daily Lives into a tidal wave of engagement

Case study

How an indie UK beauty brand turned daily Lives into a tidal wave of engagement

In 2020, make-up artist Mitchell Halliday launched Made by Mitchell, a colourful, creator-led beauty brand. Initially, it looked like many small accounts: good products, sporadic posts, polite likes. The turning point wasn’t a glossy campaign; it was a decision to show up live, consistently, and treat socials like a shop floor.

They started streaming daily from a small studio table: real people packing orders, swatching shades, answering questions in the moment. No complicated set-up; just a phone, mic, and energy. Viewers began to recognise faces and time slots. “See you tomorrow at 7?” became the refrain. The chat was filled with first names, shade questions, and “is that my parcel?” comments. Engagement didn’t spike because of luck; it rose because the brand created reasons to interact and habits to return.

The breakout broadcast tied everything together: a time-boxed promo, a simple “first X orders get a surprise add-on,” and the founder on camera guiding the show. The stream pulled in a huge live audience, comments ran non-stop, and the sales counter ticked. More importantly, the clips from that session, including best demo, funniest reaction, and fastest sell-out, fed the account’s next week of content, extending the moment and compounding reach.

What actually moved engagement (and how you can borrow it)

1) Appointment content
They went live at predictable times. That rhythm trained both the algorithm and the audience.

Small-biz move: Pick 2–3 fixed slots per week (e.g., Tue/Thu 7pm). Name the slot (“Workshop Wednesdays”) so it feels like an event, not a random post.

2) Participation hooks
“Pack with me,” name-checks, and low-cost surprises kept viewers leaning in. The chat wasn’t background noise, it was the show.

Small-biz move: Do on-camera fulfilment for a few orders; call out initials; add a tiny mystery extra for random viewers who purchase during the LIVE.

3) Event-based urgency
Limited bundles and countdowns turned interest into action.

Small-biz move: Tie each LIVE to one clear offer with an end time. Pin it in the comments; recap it every 10 minutes.

4) Creator-led trust
A human answering in real time beats a polished ad.

Small-biz move: Put a knowledgeable person on camera. Script quick answers to the top 10 objections (sizing, fit, compatibility, delivery).

5) Repurpose the moment
The LIVE wasn’t the end; it was the start. Short clips carried the best bits to non-live audiences.

Small-biz move: After each session, cut 3–5 vertical clips: one demo, one Q&A, one reaction, one testimonial.

6) Measure what matters
They watched comments per minute, average watch time, and questions answered, not just likes.

Small-biz move: Track chat/minute and save/share rate alongside sales DMs. These predict growth better than vanity metrics.

The leap in engagement came from showing up predictably, inviting participation, and giving each session a clear purpose. Made by Mitchell proved that when you treat social like a live shop floor, with fixed slots, a simple on-air hook, one time-boxed offer, and clips repurposed after, audiences don’t just watch; they talk, return, and convert.

For small businesses, the playbook is refreshingly attainable: pick consistent times, make viewers part of the moment, anchor each stream to one offer, and turn every LIVE into 3–5 short clips. Measure what actually predicts growth, and repeat the bits that move those numbers. Do this with care and consistency, and a quiet feed becomes a loyal crowd, and a steady queue at your counter. Together we’ll build a habit: we go live, we invite action, we repurpose the best moments, so growth becomes predictable, not hopeful.

~Victoria

Marketing Executive