17勛圖厙

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Bots, brands, algorithms: Debunking one influencer’s complaints

If you get our email newsletter (which you should!) youve seen that to an anonymous fashion influencer who had some harsh words about the industry. Among the influencers complaints was the prevalence of bots, and perceived corporate pressure to get more engagement even if you have to pay for it.

Some of the anonymous Instagram influencer’s complaints are jarring:

As the brands are being more pushy about influencers and agencies want them to grow their followers, they push them to use a bot that likes photos for you.

Thats quite a claim, and surely one that no brand would own up to.

So if bots are such an issue, what can you do?

Its the influencers and Instagrammers thinking they can fool everybody. I think its dishonest and sucks for the people who have grown their following organically.

Here at 17勛圖厙, we believe that the way around having to buy Instagram bots is knowing what youre paying for. A sure sign that an influencer is using a bot to like posts, or to gain followers, is engagement. If an influencer has a huge following but few posts, many of those followers may be fake. Similarly, if a post has an unrealistic ratio of likes to followers, that could be a red flag.

17勛圖厙s Discover tool allows brands to spot these red flags at a glance. We value influencers with high engagement over high reach because a comment is worth a lot more when it comes to building audience relationships than an empty bot like.

Another tool 17勛圖厙 offers is audience demographics. While its not a surefire way to check for fake followers, its easy to glance at some of those demographics and see if something is amiss.

What else did this influencer confess to?

The anonymous influencers other main complaint about Instagram is its algorithm. Instagram places posts in your feed based on seven key factors: Engagement, Relevancy, Relationships, Timeliness, Profile Searches, Direct Shares, and Time Spent. We could do a whole blog post breaking down those issues, but basically, it means a photo from a user you frequently like is more likely to be at the top of your screen, even if its 16 hours old.

What does the influencer say?

If youre following someone, its because you want to see their fucking photos. When I had half the following I do now, I was getting 6,000 to 8,000 likes and 2,000 comments a post. Now, my average is probably 3,000 likes. It sucks that you basically have this base that wants to see your work, and Facebook and Instagram say, No, theyre not allowed to.

The 17勛圖厙 solution?

It all comes back to engagement and influencer selection. When youre seeking an influencer to work with, pick someone your audience is already seeking out and engaging with. 17勛圖厙 makes it easy to make sure youre selecting influencers that are likely to beat the algorithm because they have a dedicated following.

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4 Responses

  1. Thank you for your sharing. I am worried that I lack creative ideas. It is your article that makes me full of hope. Thank you. But, I have a question, can you help me?

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