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Innovation & Industry
Business

The End of Influencers on Instagram

News RoomNews RoomJune 20, 2023No Comments4 Mins Read

Caitlin Covington never wanted to be an Instagram influencer—that is, just an Instagram influencer. She always identified as a blogger, and she held on to that even as blog readership slowly declined and Instagram began to crowd out any other type of content creation.

Caitlin has been blogging about her personal style and life since 2012 and is one of the pioneers of the industry, a fashion and lifestyle blogger who rose to fame based on her aspirational aesthetic and girl-next-door wholesomeness. It’s hard to convey her magnetism without sounding like a creepy magazine writer describing a young ingenue primarily by her looks, but Caitlin’s Disney princess beauty, her long bouncy dark hair, and her big eyes are the first things you notice when you look at her feed. When you think of an influencer, you probably think of someone like Caitlin.

In the mid-2010s, Instagram exploded as a content machine, and old-school bloggers like Caitlin were lured over to the platform as a way to grow their brand and audience. By 2021, though, Instagram content had swallowed much of the blogger industry that came before it. Influencers have told me that many brands will pay only for Instagram content and look only at Instagram numbers when determining an influencer’s rate, or they will pay premiums for Instagram. Slowly, blogs and other types of content began to fall by the wayside, until many influencers found themselves spending the majority of their workdays on Instagram. Without realizing it, they had given up something crucial. Instead of owning their business on their own platform, they now were subject to the whims of a corporation they couldn’t control, one that didn’t seem to care much about them.

“Instagram is definitely frustrating. I feel like they keep changing things, and they’re pushing Reels so heavily and people don’t want to see Reels,” Caitlin said. “They want pictures. Engagement and views are so low across the board. I feel like all of my friends I’ve talked to that are bloggers say that Instagram isn’t showing their content to anyone. So it is tough, and I don’t want to put all my eggs in one basket.”

Courtesy of Portfolio

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The tides turned around 2016, when she suspected Instagram changed the feed from showing photos chronologically to using an algorithm to determine which posts showed up in followers’ feeds. Caitlin’s engagement began to plummet. 

Over time, she began to realize that she wasn’t the problem. The issue, she said, was that Instagram was implementing changes that she felt were benefiting only the company, not the influencers who were sharing content. 

Caitlin has tried not to focus on Instagram as her only means of content creation. She never slowed down on her blog, which she has always found more fulfilling than posting on Instagram. Caitlin has also experimented with TikTok and Reels, which she enjoys. But she knows her audience doesn’t really like them, and she’s just playing into what Instagram wants. Instagram has tried to downplay how much the algorithm controls an influencer’s success. In a June 2021 blog post, Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri wrote that the existence of an almighty algorithm is one of the biggest misconceptions about the platform. He claimed that each individual user is able to tailor their own experience and pick which creators they want to see. “How you use Instagram heavily influences the things you see and don’t see,” he wrote. “You help improve the experience simply by interacting with the profiles and posts you enjoy.”

Read the full article here

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