Instagram has now started hiding likes globally. This will be phased in over an extended period of time, and I will update this blog as more information becomes available.
Instagram has started a global ‘test’ in countries, including Australia, Japan, Italy, Ireland and more, to hide public likes. In those countries, users will be able to see their likes, but they will no longer be available for everyone to see.
For people like me, who gets five or ten likes per post, depending on what both my friends are doing, it doesn’t matter, but what impact will this have on influencers and others who depend on likes to communicate their engagement and relevance?
The quotes from the people who know
“We hope this test will remove the pressure of how many likes a post will receive, so you can focus on sharing the things you love,”
Mia Garlick, Facebook Australia
Smart move? – it’s not really solving the problem, just removing one of the measurements.
Then, after a few angry posts and lengthy blogs they realised that there’s another, even more important measurement tool on Instagram that is right there next to likes – comments.
And comments isn’t just a little box that says ‘click here for comments,’ it’s a number – ‘View all 44 comments.’
If competitive metrics remain, what’s the point?
Instagram has been plagued for years by hacks and workarounds – bots and unscrupulous businesses have found ways to manipulate the app to make users look more popular than they are…and it was pretty easy. We’ve all got a friend who miraculously gained a 1000 followers in a week and then started getting 350+ likes on every post.
Comments are harder to hack.
But…why now?
The timing is interesting. Instagram ad revenues for the final period of 2018 grew by almost 180%… compared to 40% for Facebook and impressions for Instagram are up over 200%, with Facebook suffering a 17% loss. In fact, it’s estimated that Instagram advertising revenues will soon eclipse Facebook’s.
Also, with YouTube gaining massive market share as part of the Google Advertising Network, Facebook needs to focus on advertisers and create brand promises that include a high level of trust and a low likelihood that numbers are manipulatable.
This isn’t necessarily a bad move for users by Instagram, but the users are not the point; it’s a business decision with advertising spend and tangible numbers at the forefront.