In your home, you should place yours directly in front of your sunniest window. If you don’t, the plant will grow lanky and sparse over time.
Everyone’s got their own favorite “recipe”, but to start with, you can mix 2 parts potting soil with 1 part perlite and 1 part fine orchid bark. This creates a light mixture with lots of air pockets that allows excess water to drain quickly.
You can water yours once the growing medium has gone fully dry, which can be as often as every other day if you grow your plant outdoors during the hot months.
Succulents don’t tend to be heavy feeders. However, a happy mother of thousands plant that gets plenty of light will be a pretty quick grower, so it’ll benefit from the occasional light application of houseplant fertilizer.
You can remove flower stalks once they’re dead (they won’t produce any seed). If your plant dropped babies and you don’t want more, you should remove these as well.