Data reveals Instagram Reels now achieve double the reach (30%) and engagement of traditional photo or carousel posts (13-14%). With Instagram's head confirming the app is being redesigned around Reels and DMs, marketers should shift all focus to video and deprioritize static image content.

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The true measure of success for short-form video is its shareability in private channels like DMs or Slack. Content created with this goal in mind—focusing on the first three seconds and strong storytelling—will stay in the feed longer and achieve greater impact.

Instead of posting a video directly to the feed, place it on the second slide of an Instagram carousel. Use the first slide as a compelling, static text hook. This piques curiosity, encourages a swipe, and can lead to higher engagement and watch time for the video.

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.

As Instagram is flooded with Reels, the less-common carousel format offers a significant reach advantage. Repurpose existing talking-head Reels by creating a two-slide carousel: the first slide is a static image with a compelling headline, and the second slide is the original Reel. This is a low-effort, high-impact strategy.

A new feature in testing will allow users to select the exact moment a Reel begins playing when shared to a Story. This moves beyond the default start, enabling creators to strategically use a video's climax or a high-impact moment as a hook to drive viewers from Stories to the full Reel.

For the first time, Instagram is testing clickable links in Reel captions. This is a monumental shift from its long-held strategy of keeping users within the app at all costs. If rolled out, it could transform Instagram into a primary traffic driver for businesses, fundamentally changing its value.

The new app layout moves the Reels and Direct Messages tabs to more central positions on the bottom navigation bar. This redesign isn't just cosmetic; it clearly indicates Instagram's strategic priorities are short-form video for discovery and private messaging for community engagement.

Instagram has quietly removed the ability to automatically share Reels to Facebook and no longer combines view counts. This forces creators to manually post on both platforms and signals a strategic shift, potentially deflating the reach some creators were experiencing from the combined platforms.

The growth hack of repeatedly posting the same 'Trial Reel' is no longer viable. Instagram's algorithm now identifies this as a 'spam vector,' throttling views and imposing posting caps. To reuse content in Trial Reels, the first 6-7 seconds of visual content must be substantially different.

A non-obvious tactic to boost visibility is adding music to carousel posts. This small addition makes the carousel eligible to appear on the Reels tab, which is being moved to a more central and highly trafficked position in Instagram's new layout, increasing potential reach for static content.