We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Follower count is increasingly irrelevant. Today's social platforms function as 'interest media,' where algorithms prioritize surfacing the most relevant content to users, regardless of who posted it. This creates a meritocracy where a new account with great content can get more views than an established one with mediocre content.
Algorithms now push content based on its quality and relevance to user interests, not the creator's follower count. A new account can go viral and outperform established ones, creating a true meritocracy.
Modern social platforms prioritize connecting creative content with users based on their interests, not their follows. This means a piece of content can find its target audience organically, regardless of an account's pre-existing follower base, diminishing the value of a large following.
Platform algorithms now prioritize showing users content relevant to their interests, regardless of who they follow. This means a brand's follower count is less important than the relevance of each individual piece of content. Any creator can achieve massive reach on a single post, making it a true meritocracy.
The algorithmic shift from social graphs (followers) to interest graphs means a single high-quality post from a new account can outperform one from a massive account. Creative merit, not existing audience size, is the primary driver of distribution on modern platforms.
Platforms like TikTok now prioritize content based on user interest, not just who you follow. This means a new account with zero followers can achieve viral reach on its first post if the content is compelling, a fundamental shift from the old follower-based 'social graph' model.
Platforms like TikTok and Instagram now function as "interest media," not "social media." Their algorithms prioritize content based on user interests, allowing new accounts with zero followers to achieve massive reach if the content is compelling and relevant.
Platforms like TikTok have shifted from 'social media' (who you follow) to 'interest media' (what the algorithm thinks you'll like). This means creators no longer need a large follower base to achieve massive reach; a single good video can go viral for a brand new account, democratizing attention.
Social media is dead; it has been replaced by "interest media." In this new paradigm, algorithms prioritize serving users content they are interested in, regardless of who they follow. This means content quality, not follower count, is the key to achieving organic reach.
The era of building a follower list like an email list is over. Platforms now use an "interest graph," meaning a post from an account with few followers can go viral if the content is compelling. This shift democratizes reach and prioritizes content quality above all else.
Platforms like Instagram and LinkedIn no longer prioritize a user's social graph. Their algorithms serve content based on current interests, meaning brands can achieve massive reach without a large follower base if their content is highly relevant.