By changing the "Following" tab to "Friends" (mutual followers), Instagram is subtly reframing user behavior. This addresses the common user anxiety about maintaining an "elite" follower-to-following ratio. The goal is to encourage users to follow more people, thereby increasing network density and overall platform engagement.
Contrary to the narrative that follower counts are becoming irrelevant, Instagram is testing a feature allowing followers to see new Reels 24 hours before the public. This creates a powerful, direct incentive for users to follow accounts, representing a strategic bet by Instagram on the importance of the follower relationship.
According to Instagram's CEO, users now share more content via direct messages daily than they post to the public feed. This fundamental shift makes 'shareability' the most critical metric for creators aiming for growth, prioritizing content that compels users to send it to friends.
Instagram now lets users explicitly select topics for their Reels feed. This shift means creators with a tight, consistent content focus are more likely to be surfaced repeatedly. Accounts covering multiple disparate topics risk being filtered out as users narrow their preferences, making niche expertise more critical than ever for discovery.
Instagram's removal of the 'follow hashtag' and 'recents' tab, plus a drastic 80-90% reduction in the allowable number of hashtags, signals a clear strategic move away from them as a primary discovery mechanism.
Users can now manually add or remove interest categories to customize their feed algorithm. This allows creators with a well-defined niche to be directly recommended to users who have explicitly expressed interest in that topic, leveling the playing field for smaller accounts to get discovered.
Adam Mosseri's 5-year vision for Instagram is not just better recommendations, but giving users direct, 'hands-on' control to shape their own algorithms. This moves beyond passive consumption to active curation, allowing users to 'touch metal' and build their own feeds.
Platforms like TikTok and Instagram no longer primarily show content from accounts you follow. Their algorithms serve content based on demonstrated interests. This means content quality and relevance now trump follower count, leveling the playing field for new creators.
When platforms like Instagram roll out a new feature, such as the awkward long horizontal format, marketers should adopt it immediately. Platforms aggressively push new features to drive adoption, rewarding early adopters with increased visibility and reach, even if the feature itself is disliked by users and creators.
For new creators, follower count is less relevant. The algorithm now benchmarks your content's performance within a "designated cohort" of similar users and topics. This means a creator with 50 followers can achieve the reach of one with 50,000 if they effectively engage their specific niche audience.
The feature initially failed because users added only one 'best friend,' making a reply unlikely. It became successful when the team realized the core job was the emotional payoff of connection. They encouraged larger lists (20-30 people) to guarantee users would receive DMs, thus fulfilling that emotional need.