Anonymous wrote:ha! just today I was thinking how much I enjoy it and how relaxing it is. I follow national parks pages, travel pages, friends, and some pages that post inspiring quotes or pictures. I post mostly pictures with the kids, or occasional workout pictures, or pictures of something interesting from a walk or bike ride etc.Anonymous wrote:Delete instagram
It's bad for your mental health
Anonymous wrote:My instagram is private to friends only and is mostly things i cooked and my kids and pics of my garden. So are many on my feed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in social media marketing. Most of its fake, and your follower count/lifestyle pics have very little to do with how much money you make.
Some of the most profitable people I’ve worked with were ugly, never showed pics of their lifestyle, and had terrible quality pics/videos. Meanwhile there are accounts with 1 million+ followers who can’t even pull in $25k a year.
You optimize the machine for the individual, not the individual for the machine.
How do the profitable people do it? What are they doing? Just curious. Signed Gen Xer who doesn’t get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I only post for my friends and artists and writers I admire. Why would anyone care about "followers" unless it was related to their job?
This. Some of us just genuinely don't have your attention-seeking, competitive worldview, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? IG is basically for family to show each other pics of kids and family events. You are compelled to use it differently I suppose.
This.
I have a private account with just immediate/extended family and a handful of very close friends (lifelong).
Nobody thinks anyone is bragging. I get to see my cousins’ families, aunts/uncles, etc.
I get a million requests from acquaintances to follow me, I just ignore because it is just for family and those that truly love me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in social media marketing. Most of its fake, and your follower count/lifestyle pics have very little to do with how much money you make.
Some of the most profitable people I’ve worked with were ugly, never showed pics of their lifestyle, and had terrible quality pics/videos. Meanwhile there are accounts with 1 million+ followers who can’t even pull in $25k a year.
You optimize the machine for the individual, not the individual for the machine.
How do the profitable people do it? What are they doing? Just curious. Signed Gen Xer who doesn’t get it.
The influencers make themselves into advertisers. It turns the usual marketing program around where instead of a business hiring someone and filming an ad, an influencer creates a following then companies pay them to pitch. It’s a hard job to be an influencer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in social media marketing. Most of its fake, and your follower count/lifestyle pics have very little to do with how much money you make.
Some of the most profitable people I’ve worked with were ugly, never showed pics of their lifestyle, and had terrible quality pics/videos. Meanwhile there are accounts with 1 million+ followers who can’t even pull in $25k a year.
You optimize the machine for the individual, not the individual for the machine.
How do the profitable people do it? What are they doing? Just curious. Signed Gen Xer who doesn’t get it.
Anonymous wrote:I work in social media marketing. Most of its fake, and your follower count/lifestyle pics have very little to do with how much money you make.
Some of the most profitable people I’ve worked with were ugly, never showed pics of their lifestyle, and had terrible quality pics/videos. Meanwhile there are accounts with 1 million+ followers who can’t even pull in $25k a year.
You optimize the machine for the individual, not the individual for the machine.