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Rising Stars: Meet Deivis Subashi of New York

Today we’d like to introduce you to Deivis Subashi.

Hi Deivis, thanks for joining us today. We’d love for you to start by introducing yourself.
I was born in Italy and started my journey as a content creator with a passion for fashion, lifestyle, and beauty.
Through social media, I’ve been able to collaborate with international brands across fashion, beauty, travel, and luxury lifestyle while growing a community of over 1 million followers.
As my platform expanded, I wanted to create something bigger than just my personal brand, so I founded Digital Sphere Club, a creative network and hybrid agency focused on connecting influencers, models, photographers, and brands. The vision was to build a community where creatives could collaborate, grow their platforms, and learn how to turn content creation into a real business.

Today, I continue to focus on growing Digital Sphere Club globally while helping brands and creators elevate their presence through storytelling, creativity, and digital influence. My journey has always been about combining creativity, entrepreneurship, and authentic connection through content.

Would you say it’s been a smooth road, and if not what are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced along the way?
One challenge for me is honestly having too many ideas. I’m someone who feels inspired all the time, and almost every day I come up with a new creative concept, business idea, or project I want to build. While that’s something I’m grateful for, it can also become overwhelming because sometimes it’s hard to focus on just one direction when your mind is constantly creating.
As a creative entrepreneur, especially in fashion, lifestyle, and beauty, inspiration moves fast, and I always want to execute everything at once. Over time, I’ve had to learn how to organize my vision, prioritize ideas, and stay focused so I can turn creativity into something meaningful instead of spreading myself too thin.

Thanks for sharing that. So, maybe next you can tell us a bit more about your work?
I’m a content creator, creative entrepreneur, and founder of Digital Sphere Club, specializing in fashion, lifestyle, and beauty content. My work focuses on creating cinematic and visually driven storytelling that blends luxury aesthetics, culture, travel, and personal branding. Over the years, I’ve built a global audience of more than 1 million followers across social media and have collaborated with international brands in fashion, beauty, and lifestyle, travelled the world for fashion weeks and interesting projects.
What I’m most proud of is being able to turn my creativity into a real platform and community. Beyond creating content for myself, I founded Digital Sphere Club to bring together creators, influencers, models, photographers, and brands through networking, collaborations, and creative opportunities. Building something that inspires and connects other creatives has been one of the most rewarding parts of my career.
I think what sets me apart is my vision and storytelling style. I’ve always focused on creating content that feels cinematic, elevated, and emotionally connected rather than just following trends. I’m also someone who constantly thinks outside the box and brings fresh ideas into everything I do, whether it’s content creation, branding, or creative direction. My European background combined with my experience in New York has also shaped a unique perspective and aesthetic that influences my work today.

Is there any advice you’d like to share with our readers who might just be starting out?
A few things I wish I understood earlier:
Consistency matters more than intensity
Most people burn themselves out trying to make one perfect thing. The people who improve fastest usually just keep showing up. Small daily progress compounds in ways that are hard to see at first.
Your first work will probably be mediocre, and that’s normal
Beginners often think good creators start with good output. Usually they start with a lot of unfinished, awkward, forgettable work. Skill comes from volume and repetition, not waiting until you “feel ready.”
Don’t build in isolation for too long
Share your work earlier than feels comfortable. Feedback speeds everything up. It also helps you stop overestimating what people notice or judge.
Learn communication alongside the craft
A surprising amount of success comes from being able to explain ideas clearly, respond professionally, and build relationships. Talent helps, but reliability and communication open doors.
Comparison can quietly ruin momentum
You’re usually comparing your behind the scenes to someone else’s polished highlight reel. Compare yourself to where you were six months ago instead.
Protect your curiosity
It’s easy to turn everything into performance, metrics, or pressure. The people who last tend to keep some sense of experimentation and play in what they do.
Ask more questions
Early on, I thought asking questions made me look inexperienced. In reality, thoughtful questions often make people trust you more because it shows engagement and self awareness.
You do not need to have everything figured out
A lot of people you admire are improvising more than you think. Careers are rarely linear. Momentum often comes from taking the next reasonable step, not from having a perfect long term plan.
Build a reputation before you need one
Be the person who follows through, replies thoughtfully, and does solid work even on small opportunities. People remember that.
Patience is underrated
Most meaningful progress takes longer than expected. If you stay in the game long enough, you automatically separate yourself from a lot of people who quit too early.
One practical mindset shift that helps:
Instead of asking “Am I good enough yet?” ask “Am I improving?” That question leads to much healthier growth.

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