Posting more is hurting engagement? Noticing this trend

We looked at ~20 Instagram accounts this month (D2C, fitness, food) and noticed a pattern:

After ~5 posts/week, engagement starts dropping.

Accounts posting ~3x/week consistently were getting ~30-35% higher engagement vs daily posting.

This showed up across small creators and brand pages.

I'm curious, are you seeing the same with your account or clients?
Is it content fatigue, quality drop, or algo behavior?

Comments

Informal-Amoeba-88843 months ago2

I think it’s also audience fatigue. if people see too much similar content from the same account, they just stop engaging

cam_mzk3 months ago1

Daily posting is the fastest way to burn out both your creative team and your audience's interest. the "post every day" advice is honestly becoming a relic of 2019 Instagram.
Basically, when you post daily, your own content starts competing against itself in the feed before the previous post has even peaked. I switched a luxury skincare brand from 7x to 3x a week and their reach actually doubled 'cause the algorithm had more time to find the right audience for each piece.

sanjay25173 months ago1

What you are seeing is real in a lot of cases, just not as black and white as "post more = lower engagement". In most cases, its a content dilution + audience fatigue + quality decay across each post that is causing problems and NOT a penalty from the algorithm.

Therefore, when there is an increase in the number of posts (especially between ~3 -- 5-7+ times/week), it usually leads to:

This is the point when you have your most average content quality because production pressure rises.

Not every post gets attention, the audience doesn’t have time for it, so engagement is “splitting”

Each individual post is then distributed by Instagram according to early engagement signals — weaker early performance can limit reach.

However, there is another side to the coin: accounts that post less frequently seem to put much more effort into every post leading to stronger hooks and retention leads higher saves/shares and as a result comes higher engagement rate.

Low-frequencyposting can work better for you, high frequency posting can do the same, if:

Content value is relatively uniform (by series format, reels structure, strong hooks)

Frequency can be absorbed because the audience is large enough

You Are Not Repeating or Getting Too Close to the Same Type of Content

This means that it’s not posting more makes your engagement go down by default, it simply reveals poor consistency faster. What matters is not the amount of posts, but the content quality par post and posting pressure exercised.

LeadingAd66793 months ago1

posting more works only if quality stays high. otherwise it backfires pretty quickly

Electrical-Tear-3083 months ago1

Spot on! At Monkey Plus (our agency based in Ecuador), we’ve been auditing similar patterns across our LATAM clients, and the results are almost identical.

We call this 'Content Cannibalization.' When brands post daily, they often don’t give the algorithm enough time to fully distribute the previous piece. You're basically killing your own reach by overlaying a new post too soon.

A few things we’ve validated with our methodology:

Quality > Frequency: Instagram’s current algorithm prioritizes 'Time Spent' and 'Shares.' Three high-impact pieces perform significantly better than seven mediocre ones.

The Fatigue Factor: It’s not just the algo; it's the audience. D2C and Food niches are saturated. People want value, not just noise.

Diversification is Key: We always tell our clients that relying solely on IG is risky. A solid Web Development strategy (SEO-focused) and Automation to nurture leads usually bring a better ROI than just fighting for daily engagement.

Have you noticed if this 3x/week sweet spot changes when you lean heavily into Reels vs. Carousels? We've seen Reels have a slightly longer 'tail' in distribution.

Great analysis!

Olivia_at_Kudzu3 months ago1

Yes, I have seen this across many of my client's accounts. When they post multiple times a day or every day, engagement does not increase/drops off. When they're posting quality, niche content 2-3 times a week at most, their audience engages at a much higher rate.

NoOpposite87693 months ago1

I’ve been noticing this exact same thing with my own projects lately! It feels like the more I try to "feed the beast" with constant posting, the less the platforms actually reward me. It’s exhausting. As someone still learning the technical ropes, I’ve started shifting my energy away from the "quantity" of posts and more toward the "quality" of where I’m actually sending people. I figured if I’m going to post less, the one link I do share needs to be perfect.

I actually started using Tiiny Host for my landing pages because it’s so fast and simple. I’m definitely not a pro dev, so being able to just drag and drop a zip file and have a live link in seconds is great for my sanity.

glossariumbeauty3 months ago1

This is great to read. I’ve been feeling burnt out and I barely get engagement. I’ll post less. You don’t have to tell me twice.

AutoModerator3 months ago1

If this post doesn't follow the rules, please report it to the mods.

I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.

Soggy_Leg_63663 months ago1

I’ve had accounts where daily posting worked but only when the format was very repeatable and strong. Otherwise, yeah, fewer but better posts tend to win.

More like this

EVERYTHING ABOUT THE INSTAGRAM ALGORITHM IN 2026

When you post, Instagram doesn't evaluate your content all at once. Distribution is continuous and adaptive. The system is constantly re-ranking your post based on signals it collects over time. Early engagement matters a lot, but posts can pick up hours or even days later, especially Reels. It's not a single batch test. It's an ongoing one. What you need to understand is that the algorithm is always watching the same core signals, and most people are optimizing for the wrong ones. **What actually moves the needle** Instagram's CEO confirmed this year that three signals are driving distribution more than anything else right now. Watch time is number one by a significant margin. Viewers decide within about 1.7 seconds whether to keep watching. If people are dropping off in the first 3 seconds, your post dies. If they make it past 50%, that's a strong signal. If they rewatch, that's explosive. Your retention curve is more important than your like count, full stop. Second is likes per reach, meaning the percentage of people who actually liked your post out of everyone who saw it. This matters more for reaching your existing followers than for growing to new audiences. Third, and this is the one most people are underestimating, is DM shares. When someone sends your post to a friend, Instagram treats it as a stronger endorsement than a like or even a comment. It signals that your content is worth recommending to strangers. Every post should have a built-in "send this to someone who needs it" moment, intentionally. If you're still optimizing primarily for likes in 2026, you're behind. **The format breakdown** Reels are for reaching new people. Carousels and photos are for your existing followers. Stories are for keeping those followers from leaving. They're not interchangeable. They serve completely different purposes in the algorithm. Carousels are underrated right now. Instagram does re-rank posts over time, which means a carousel that didn't land on the first impression can get another shot. The takeaway: make every slide worth stopping on, not just the first. Stories aren't optional if retention matters to you. Accounts that post consistently to Stories see meaningfully fewer unfollows. Stories keep your existing audience warm while your Reels pull new people in. **What you should actually be doing** Forget posting volume targets. Quality is the prerequisite. High frequency with low quality lowers your retention metrics and actively hurts your distribution. Run this instead: Every day: one high-quality Reel with a hook in the first 2 seconds and a clear share trigger built in, plus 3 to 5 Story frames to stay visible and keep your audience connected. Three to four times a week: a carousel optimized for saves and shares, something educational, useful, or worth returning to. Every single post should pass three checks before it goes out. Does the hook land in under 2 seconds? Is there one clear idea? Is there a reason someone would send this to a friend? **On niche consistency** Your last 9 to 12 posts define how Instagram categorizes your account. The algorithm rewards tight topic focus and punishes accounts that drift between unrelated content. Whatever angle you've built your account around, stay in it consistently. It's not about being in a broad niche. It's about having a distinct point of view within one. A hundred fitness creators exist. Only a few have a perspective that's immediately recognizable. That's the real differentiator. **Where I've seen this work** I grew from 100 followers to 360k using these principles. Grew 10+ accounts from 0 to 10k and sold most of them. The process was the same every time: understand what the algorithm is currently rewarding, make content that earns retention and shares, stay consistent for months not weeks, and adjust based on what the data tells you. It's not exciting. It's a system. Systems win. **TLDR** This post blew up last time so I'm bringing it back with answers to the most common questions I got. Before anything else, few things I wish someone told me earlier: 1. **Consistency** is the only thing that actually matters. I know everyone says this and everyone ignores it. That's literally why most people fail. The people winning are not smarter than you, they just didn't quit. 2. Video quality matters more than most people admit. Drop CapCut, get Adobe Premiere or hire an editor. Skip Fiverr, find editors in **Discord communities** instead, way cheaper and actually good. 3. Stop wasting hours on scripts, hooks, and hunting for content ideas manually. I use **SocialHunt** for all of that. You can train it on viral content in your niche and it handles the research and scripting side so you can just focus on filming. 4. Use **Superflow** to handle distribution, workflows, and repetitive ops. If you’re doing things manually, you’re capping growth.

3 months ago
255

Any people that runs 100 to 10k followers pages (any social media)?

Hey all, I own a business that involves many clients that promote their product, art or website with TikTok (also Instagram, Youtube and Facebook). I want to offer them a way to post their content, or to get content created and posted for them on existing TikTok pages. Basically you got pages in a specific theme (sport, anime, cinema, culture, memes...) and you rent it for a specific period of time. You get paid every month, and all you have to do is basically connecting the account once to our system. You can opt-out anytime you want, you keep the full ownership of the account. That's basically a way to monetize your pages passively. For now I'm doing it myself with my own pages (3 tiktok pages with 500 to 3k followers, and 1 6k subscribers Youtube channel), I made around $800 renting these for less than a month. If someone is interested, please comment or DM!

3 months ago
222

Everything dying at 300 views for so long before I finally caught the problem

I've been absolutely obsessed with short form content for the last two years. Like people have staged actual interventions about my health level of obsessed. I'm talking 11-14 hour days breaking down what separates successful videos from failures, experimenting with different hook variations, rewriting scripts until my brain hurts, testing every editing approach I could possibly get my hands on. Why this level of obsession? Because I'm absolutely certain short form video is the backbone of everything right now. Growing followers, selling anything, generating opportunities, creating brands from nothing. Every part of it depends on whether you can hold someone's attention for 30 seconds. But here's what nearly made me quit entirely: despite the constant daily grind, nothing was hitting. I'd pour 7-8 hours into crafting one video only to watch it crash at 300 views. Tried every tactic from every person claiming to have figured it out. Bought their courses. Applied their "proven" methods. Still going nowhere. I seriously started thinking maybe I'm just not the type of person who can make this work. Like maybe there's some fundamental ability I'm completely lacking. Then something clicked. I'm grinding constantly, but I'm operating completely blind. I don't actually know what's broken. I'm essentially just trying random things hoping something eventually works. So I stopped hunting for some mythical viral code and started analyzing actual data. Analyzed my last 50 videos second by second, documented every retention drop, and discovered 5 consistent patterns that were systematically killing my performance: 1. **Vague mysterious hooks are totally invisible** "This will transform you..." gets scrolled past every time. But "I used resistance bands for 55 days and my shoulder mobility actually decreased" stops people mid scroll. Specific concrete details destroy vague teasing without exception. 2. **Seconds 5-7 are where everything gets decided** Most viewers leave between 4-7 seconds if you haven't proven it's worth watching. I was creating slow buildups like a complete amateur. Now my strongest visual or most compelling number arrives exactly at second 5. That's where the hook that genuinely holds people. 3. **Any gap beyond 1 second absolutely kills your retention** Tracked this obsessively, anything past 1.2 seconds makes people think the video stopped. What feels like natural comfortable pacing to you reads as complete dead time to someone scrolling. Cut significantly tighter than feels normal. 4. **Visual variety is absolutely critical** If nothing changes on screen for more than 3 seconds, attention vanishes without warning. I started constantly rotating camera angles, cutting to b-roll, moving text placement, literally anything to maintain constant visual movement. Went from losing 50% at the halfway mark to keeping 70%. 5. **Rewatch rate is dramatically more important than most people realize** Videos people watch more than once get pushed exponentially harder by the algorithm. Started planting subtle details that aren't obvious first viewing, editing faster, adding elements worth discovering on rewatch. Rewatch percentage jumped from 8% to 31% and reach went completely through the roof. Honestly the biggest shift was abandoning all guesswork and actually measuring what was happening at every second. Came across this one app that goes way beyond showing where people drop off, it literally tells you why and exactly how to correct it. That's when everything transformed. Went from averaging 300 views to hitting 18k in about 4 weeks. Regular analytics show you people are leaving. This one shows the exact second, the actual reason, and what to adjust before your next post. If you're uploading consistently but stuck below 1k views, your content isn't the problem. You just don't know what's genuinely working versus what you assume is working. Listen, I'm sharing this because breaking through was honestly one of the hardest things I've tackled. I really wish someone had just explained exactly what needed fixing when I was stuck there. Would have saved months of confusion and doubt. So that's what I'm doing now for anyone who needs it.

4 months ago
221