A 3-month-old app.
$50K in monthly recurring revenue.
10 million views on TikTok.
Seven accounts, all posting slideshows.
The same team that built Chart AI (a finance app) is behind this new one — an “AI that predicts your video’s performance.”
It’s a major pivot from their previous projects, with a completely new strategy.
Here’s how it works: you upload a video, and the so-called “AI” gives you a performance forecast and tips for improvement.
Until June, growth was slow.
Then everything changed.
(Quick note: I say “AI” because it’s probably random, but still.)

They doubled downloads and jumped to $50K MRR.
They now run seven TikTok accounts.
Two stand out:
1/ tt@emily.growth
Started posting on May 7th and quickly found a winning formula — aesthetic, girly slideshows.
One post hit 2.9 million views and 30,000 comments.
The call-to-action appears on slide four — right in the middle — with the app name and screenshots.
Every slideshow follows the same pattern.
They spark thousands of comments asking about features, pricing, and availability.
Emily (or John, for what we know) replies to every single one.
“Influencer for influencers” is a big TikTok niche, and she’s nailed it.
Emily has 46K followers; Brady, the second account, has 35K.

Both use faceless, personal slideshow-style content.
Emily’s videos are basically Pinterest girl aesthetics framed as a “personal brand.”
Viral reach + heavy engagement + follow triggers.
Together, the accounts have over 10 million views.
The videos convert well — lots of viewers end up buying into the whole “creator lifestyle.”
“Don’t sell your features, sell the dream,” – as they say.
Still, retention is likely low for something like this. It feels like a short-term money grab.
As one commenter put it, “Y’all are getting fooled by an AI app with great marketing.”

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