But all that attention isn’t great for marketers. When any social network grows big enough, it starts to crack down on the questionably legal elements that helped spur its early growth. YouTube and Facebook did it with video clip copyright claims, and over the past seven weeks, Instagram has started a crackdown of its own: It’s getting rid of auto-commenting marketing bots.
The Botpocalypse
One popular Instagram marketing trick relies on third-party bot companies which can comment on photos across the social network. Targeting specific hashtags, the bots leave affirming yet nondescript comments (“Cool!,” “love it,” the fire emoji) in order to get a follow back from a user in their demographic. But these companies have started to go out of business abruptly, apparently at the request of Instagram itself. On April 20, 2017, Instagress closed shop. On May 13, Mass Planner was announced to have followed suit. Peer Boost, Instaplus, and Fan Harvest have all fallen to Instagram’s chopping block in recent months. The list comes via the New York Times, which recently published an article that called the problem a game of Whac-a-Mole, given the number of bot companies that can spring up to replace those closed down. Still, Instagram is targeting the most successful companies, and has already curbed the process considerably.
It’s Probably a Good Development
It’s likely all for the best, though: Follower counts don’t mean much compared to engagement rates, and the increase in followers that a bot can pull in is likely due to other bots themselves. The bots are only attracting bots. By cutting out commenting bots across the board, Instagram is just leveling the playing field for any Instagram marketing types who earn their followers the honest route. Read more about social media on Tech.Co