EALO@Ealo06
You don’t just make a post and close X, hoping it gets engagement.
That’s one of the biggest mistakes people make.
You post something, then leave it… expecting it to gain traction on its own.
Meanwhile, someone else posts and their content keeps moving, getting likes, replies, reposts.
Then you wonder why yours is different.
It’s not luck.
The people getting good reach on their posts are doing something you’re not doing.
And that’s exactly why their posts keep gaining traction while yours stay dormant.
I took my time to study a lot of accounts with good reach; both accounts with high followers and those with low followers.
I paid attention to what they do differently.
I tested different theories, tried different strategies, and over time, I figured out what actually works.
And one thing I can tell you for free:
Boosting a post is not luck. It’s a strategic move.
Before you even make a post, you need to check your content properly.
No matter the kind of content you’re putting out.
- First, check the tone of your content.
Is it projecting the exact feeling you want people to have when they read it?
- Next, check your hook.
Is it catchy enough to make someone stop scrolling?
- Then put yourself in your audience’s shoes.
If you randomly come across this post, would you actually stop and read it?
Be honest with yourself.
- Also look at your title and your cover (if it applies).
Is it strong enough to grab attention immediately?
All these things matter more than you think.
Now, when everything looks good and you finally post…
This is where most people get it wrong.
They disappear.
That’s why you’ll see really good content with very poor traction.
Before you even make a post; whether it’s short or long even if it's just a simple GM post; start by engaging.
Reply to other people’s posts.
Let the algorithm register that your account is active.
Then you make your post.
After posting, don’t go offline.
Continue engaging.
Reply to people, interact, stay visible.
This helps draw more attention back to your page.
Immediately after posting:
Like your post.
Repost it.
Bookmark it.
Then go further:
Engage your mutuals and even non-mutuals.
Drop meaningful comments, not just random words.
Be intentional with your replies.
Next thing; reposting.
Reposting is very important.
It keeps your post alive on the timeline.
Some people say repost every hour, but honestly, what works better is reposting more consistently.
It could be every 10 minutes, every 30 minutes; depending on what works for you.
You don’t have to wait up to an hour.
Keep reposting, especially when your mutuals are online.
That brings me to another important point:
You need to know when your audience is active.
When your mutuals are online, your post has a higher chance of gaining fast traction.
Timing can give you a serious boost.
And finally, the kind of content you create matters a lot.
If your post drives strong emotions, it will most likely move faster.
Because humans are emotional beings.
If people can relate to what you’re saying, they’ll stop scrolling.
They’ll read.
They’ll engage.
If you’ve been struggling with low reach, it’s not because your content is bad.
You’re just missing the strategy behind it.
Start applying this and you’ll see the difference.
And if you want me to break this down even deeper or help you fix your content.
Drop a comment, the more comments will determine if I'll put out more contents on this.
Don't forget to like this, repost and bookmark for later.
Now go get your posts moving the way they should.