Recently, I have been observing the recommendation logic of social platforms and becoming increasingly convinced: which traffic zone you are assigned to determines how much exposure you can get each day.
This is the problem—posting more frequently actually dilutes the traffic for each piece of content. The system evenly distributes your daily quota across all your published content.
The only way to break this deadlock is to create viral hits. Once a piece of content hits the mark and prompts the algorithm to push you to a higher traffic level, the pool expands. Afterwards, the average exposure per piece of content will rise accordingly.
Rather than posting frequently, it’s better to be precise and targeted.
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Recently, I have been observing the recommendation logic of social platforms and becoming increasingly convinced: which traffic zone you are assigned to determines how much exposure you can get each day.
This is the problem—posting more frequently actually dilutes the traffic for each piece of content. The system evenly distributes your daily quota across all your published content.
The only way to break this deadlock is to create viral hits. Once a piece of content hits the mark and prompts the algorithm to push you to a higher traffic level, the pool expands. Afterwards, the average exposure per piece of content will rise accordingly.
Rather than posting frequently, it’s better to be precise and targeted.