Best way to organically build back up followers after years away and losing thousands of them?

I started a page back in 2015 that I organically built up in the span of a couple years to nearly 20,000 followers with great engagement- it was going really well, had lots of a-list (from that field) names following it. Then I lost a parent to a nasty illness in 2018, got very depressed and left everything behind, gave up on it entirely. Lately I've been very reinvigorated to start back up, but am a bit defeated to see countless thousands have unfollowed in those years- in retrospect, I would've been better off temporarily deleting the page vs. leaving it active but unused for so long. I'm down to just 10.1k.

I'm just wondering what the best ways to organically build back up a following would be in 2026. I'm aware that reels are what's being pushed more these days- should I focus my efforts 100% on that? The thing is, the page relied on professional photos, and pro video is another facet I don't know anything at all about, so I hate the idea of 'downgrading', aesthetically speaking.

Would appreciate any advice!

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DoorSad40722 months ago1

I would not start over if I were you. A page with 10k+ followers and old credibility is still a better base than a fresh account with zero content history. You can ease back into it by posting consistently first and reminding people what the page is about, then start mixing in a few simple reels or behind the scenes posts when you have the energy to do it.

HitxLerr2 months ago1

Real talk, coming back after a long break can feel brutal because the platform still associates your account with an old audience that may not care about the new direction anymore lol. The algorithm needs fresh engagement signals before it starts testing your content with newer viewers. Focusing on highly saveable or shareable content is honestly smart because saves, shares, and meaningful interactions tend to signal stronger value than passive views haha. Tbh, consistent posting plus genuine interaction within your niche usually helps retrain the algorithm over time. Rebuilding momentum is slower than starting fresh sometimes, but once the new audience signals kick in, growth usually starts compounding again fr.

PerspectiveCalm35082 months ago1

Rebuilding an audience organically the second time is weirdly easier because you already know what actually works and what’s just noise.

youneedtobreathe2 months ago1

Sorry for your loss

I don't have much advice but to back up what everyone else is saying, don't bother with a new account in 2026.

Most algos completely exclude new users and do not prioritze discovery anymore, its practically impossible to grow from scratch right now

ABDULKALAM_4972 months ago1

10k with real history is still an asset. Post consistently for 60 days before judging results. Reels help reach but carousels retain, do both. Your old aesthetic can work as a strength not a downgrade.

Parking-Ad30462 months ago1

10k is still a good number to restart with. Focus on carousels with your pro photos. Video helps but good photography stands out more now because everyone else is doing shaky phone clips. Post consistently for a month and engage with similar accounts daily. The algorithm will wake back up.

Independent-Ant-72302 months ago1

First, losing followers after years of inactivity is honestly very normal, especially across that amount of time and platform changes.

But having 10k+ followers still remaining after such a long gap actually says something important too, a lot of people still found the account worth keeping around.

I also wouldn’t think of learning video as “downgrading” the aesthetic. The platforms changed, but high-quality visual taste still matters. Good reels don’t necessarily mean chaotic trends or low-quality editing. A lot of strong creators are basically turning photography instincts into motion instead of replacing them.

And honestly, your story itself probably matters more now than it would have years ago. People connect much more deeply to creators who disappeared for real life reasons and came back with perspective than perfectly optimized content machines.

I’d focus less on chasing growth hacks and more on rebuilding consistency, identity and momentum again first.

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