Zuckerberg says nearly 30% of Instagram & FB feeds will be content from people you don't follow

Published , by Donovan Erskine

The current direction of Instagram has been a point of discussion around the internet lately. As the platform looks to compete with TikTok, it’s continued to push Reels (its short form video content) harder and harder. The same issue applies to Facebook, which shares a parent company with Instagram in Meta. During the latest company earnings call, Meta CEO and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg stated that roughly 15 percent of the content users see on Facebook and Instagram is from accounts that they don’t follow, and he expects that number to eventually double.

It was during the Q2 2022 Facebook (META) earnings call that company co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg discussed the recent changes users have noticed to how content is presented to them on both Facebook and Instagram. 15 percent of the content that users are fed on their timeline is from accounts that they aren’t actually following, with the majority of it being Reels. It’s something that Facebook and Instagram users have been quite critical of, but the company expects that number to increase to 30 percent in the future.


Source: Facebook

Instagram first added the ability to share videos several years ago. In 2019, the company created Reels, a short form video feature that allows users to attach music to their videos, and take advantage of multiple other tools that allows it to compete with TikTok. On TikTok, the majority of content that users see is on their “For You” page, and it’s typically not from accounts that they follow, but rather based on their interests as determined by an influencer. It appears that this is what Facebook and Instagram are looking to emulate with Reels.

For those that were hoping Instagram and Facebook would hear the user outcry and pull back on the video push from accounts they don’t follow, it appears that the opposite is happening. For more news out of Meta’s earnings report and subsequent earnings call, Shacknews has the information you need.