Content That Actually Works

Most tattoo artists think content is the marketing for tattoo artists starting point. It isn’t.

Content is the result of everything you’ve already worked through. If those things aren’t clear, your content won’t be either.

What content actually is

Content is how people experience your work before they meet you.

It’s how you show:

  • what you do
  • who it’s for
  • what it’s like to get tattooed by you

It’s not just what you post but what people understand from it.

Where most tattoo artists go wrong

They focus on surface-level questions:

  • What should I post?
  • How often should I post?
  • What time should I post?

But those are the least important questions. Because if the message isn’t clear, posting more just creates more noise.

What content should be doing

Every piece of content should help someone quickly understand:

  • what you do
  • who it’s for
  • what they can expect

If it doesn’t do that, it might look good. But it won’t do much for your business.

A simple way to think about it

Your content should answer three questions for the right person:

  1. Is this what I’m looking for?
  2. The kind of person I want to work with?
  3. Can I trust them to do a good job?

If your content answers those clearly, you don’t need to chase people. They come to you already decided.

What to actually show

You don’t need endless ideas. Just clarity.

Focus on showing:

The work itself
Clear, honest examples of what you do.

The process
How you think, your approach to tattooing and how you work with clients.

The experience
What it feels like to be in your chair, your space, your environment.

The outcome
Not just the tattoo, but how it sits on the body, how it heals and how people feel about it.

Why this works

This isn’t about trying to be interesting. It’s about being clear and consistent.

When people see the same signals over time, they start to understand you. And once they understand you, they trust you.

What consistency actually means

Consistency doesn’t mean posting every day.

It means being consistent in what you show and how you show it.

If one post says one thing, and the next says something completely different, people don’t know where to place you.

And when they don’t know, they don’t choose you.

Connecting this back

Your content is where everything comes together:

If those are clear, content becomes simple. If they’re not, content feels like a constant struggle.

The shift

Stop asking:

“What should I post?”

Start asking:

“What do people need to see to understand what I do?”

Straight truth

You don’t need more content. You need clearer content.

Quick exercise

Look at your last 9 posts.

Ask yourself:

  • Would someone new understand what I do just from this?
  • Is there a clear type of work, or does it feel mixed?
  • Does it feel consistent?
  • Would the right client recognise themselves here?

If not, don’t post more. Fix the signal first.

And when you talk about your work, use your own voice.

Write like you’re speaking directly to that one perfect client.

If you’re excited about the tattoo, sound excited.

If you love the technical side, talk about the technical side.

If you care more about the artistic choices, talk about the art.

Neither approach is wrong.

As long as it genuinely reflects you.

Because over time, your voice starts compounding across everything you share.

People begin to understand:

  • who you are
  • what you care about
  • how you think
  • what kind of experience they can expect from you

And if you communicate naturally enough, something interesting happens.

People stop feeling like they’re looking at “content.”

And start feeling like they already know you.

That’s what a real brand actually is.

Not a logo. Not a colour palette.

A consistent feeling people associate with you over time.

Final thought

Marketing for tattoo artists isn’t about doing more.

It’s about showing the right things, clearly, over time. Because when people understand you, they trust you.

And when they trust you, they choose you.