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Posting 12 times a day is like buying more raffle tickets. While the average post may perform lower, the sheer volume provides more opportunities for outlier content to go viral, ultimately yielding more "grand slams" than a lower-frequency strategy.

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Forcing a team to meet a weekly post quota often leads to mediocre content. A better strategy is to ditch fixed schedules and instead post extensively—even ten times—about a single viral moment when it occurs. This approach prioritizes quality and impact over arbitrary volume.

The algorithm limits reach so severely that most followers won't see all your content. During a launch, high-frequency posting is essential to break through the noise. Like Bieber's album drop, most fans only saw a fraction of his 97 promotional posts.

Previously, posting more than once in an 18-hour window would harm your reach. This is no longer the case. The current algorithm supports "content velocity," allowing creators and pages to post up to three times per day without cannibalizing engagement, rewarding consistent, high-frequency output.

A Buffer analysis of two million posts shows a non-linear return on posting frequency. While posting 2-5 times weekly adds 1,000 views to future posts, increasing frequency to 6-10 times quintuples that boost to over 5,000 additional impressions per post, demonstrating a significant algorithmic reward for high activity.

The most successful organic posts are not born from a strategic plan but are discovered through constant, high-volume posting. Breakthrough success in content comes from putting in the 'reps' and observing what resonates, rather than waiting for a single brilliant idea.

When scaling from 3 to 12 daily posts, individual post views and engagement initially decreased. However, aggregate metrics like total reach and profile visits grew significantly over 90 days, proving the strategy's success. This initial dip is a temporary hurdle to overcome.

The key to high-volume solo production is systemization. Define a set of repeatable content formats (e.g., tweet screenshots, text carousels), script a month's worth at once using AI, then dedicate separate blocks of time for production, editing, and scheduling.

The "more you post, the more you grow" principle favors frequency over perfection. Creators are often poor judges of what will go viral. Instead of spending 30 minutes on one "perfect" post, spend 10 minutes each day on three separate "good enough" posts to increase statistical chances of success and improve faster through repetition.

Critics who call high-volume social media content 'spray and pray' are mistaken. Gary Vaynerchuk argues it is the modern equivalent of traditional advertising frequency, like running daily print or radio ads. The low cost of production simply enables more strategic 'shots on goal' to achieve relevance.

Engineer virality with a quantity-over-quality approach. Instead of creating one perfect video, post thousands of variations. The aggregate views from many low-performing videos (e.g., 1,000 views each) guarantee a large total reach, with any individual video going viral being a bonus. This strategy is what the founder terms 'volume negates luck'.

High-Frequency Posting Increases the Number of "Grand Slam" Viral Posts | RiffOn