Love it or hate it, Instagram is a major force in marketing these days. Itβs no longer a social network for just the cool kids. Instagram has hit the mainstream, and thatβs excellent news for you. Like anything else going mainstream, coming in late can feel impossible. Playing catch-up is not fun or easy, but Instagram is one of those networks where you can get up-to-speed relatively quickly.
Knowing how to get followers on Instagram has never been easier since the network has so many tools and cliques and fun little corners to explore.
Youβre sitting there thinking, βSeriously? Thatβs your advice?βΒ But hear me out. Hashtags are still a major tool for Instagram users. Yes, Instagram has a reputation for vapid and self-indulgent hashtags likeΒ #nofilter,Β #iwokeuplikethis, orΒ #selfielove. But outside of the commonly mocked ones, there are tons that get used by people who are directly in your targeted demographic. In fact, some hashtags even have full communities built around them and almost function like little forums.
Finding the right ones isnβt nearly as hard it once was. Instagram has finally put in an autocomplete feature that offers suggestions whenever you type in #. The useful aspect of this is seeing the number of posts for each hashtag. You can finally see where users are spending their time.
#UseThemWell
But just throwing any even remotely relevant hashtags into your posts may not necessarily be the best way to get exposure. You have to use hashtags that are truly pertinent to your brand or your specific audience.
Letβs say that youβre looking for followers to promote your new clientβs handmade guitar website, you can absolutely useΒ #music. But thatβs too generic. It has a wide reach, and it hasΒ 181 millionΒ public posts as of this writing, but thatβs a lot of competition. Too much noise to get noticed. You could useΒ #guitar, but it~22 million posts, which is still a lot of noise. #guitars, on the other hand, has a slightly more manageable 1.9 million.
However, like SEO, the further you drill down, you will find the good stuff that really converts. Just using the autosuggest, the tags #guitarshop, #customguitar, #customguitars, #handmadeguitar, and #handmadeguitarsΒ showed up anywhere between 80k to 200k posts. This is where your target users are, so the more you make yourself a presence there, they more people who will follow you. Itβs likely you can get some of the top posts in a niche area.
Let me mention again the communities that spring up around hashtags. You want to find where people hang out, like maybeΒ #guitarplayers or #indierockalabama. These are the areasΒ where tons of potential followers congregate and become friends.
And because these arenβt as jam-packed asΒ #music, your posts will stay on top longer for more people to see you, follow you, and start to love you.
The last two things you need to consider when using hashtags to fish for followers is how many to use and where you should include them. Instagram allows up to 30 hashtags per post, but you shouldnβt always use that many (it seems like spamming). Some case studies have shown that interaction often plateaus after 10 tags.
Adding that many hashtags to your post can seem spammy, too. You can get around that by putting 5 single dots on 5 single lines so that the post collapses in peopleβs feeds. Even better than that, you can add a comment to your own photo thatβs nothing but hashtags, and IG will still index your photo with them. But it has to be the first comment and because of how the IG algorithms work, and you need to post that comment immediately upon publication. If not, you may lose some juice and miss out on some potential followers.
Oh, and you can add hashtags to Stories, too. So when youβre documenting your day or doing something silly or fun, put some hashtags in the text box. Theyβre searchable! They might not look great in your storyβs composition, so you can shrink the hashtag box down and hide it behind a supersized emoji. Instant expanded audience (or is thatΒ Insta expanded audience?) who will see the real you and follow you β because your story proves that youβre too awesome not to follow.
Instagram is a social network. So you really need to be social. It can be really easy to shout into the night, but if you really want to learn how to get followers on Instagram, you have to be someone they want to follow.
- Like other peopleβs photos and comments.Β That activity shows up to your followers, and it creates a circular network. You like their post, they click on yours and like it, someone else sees their activity and likes you enough to follow. This is aΒ majorΒ way to get followers these days, but it means you have to be active on IG, not just scheduling posts and leaving. You canβt expect a zillion shares and retweets on IG like you can on other platforms. It takes work here. Sorry!
- Comment and talk to people.Β When you get a comment on a post, reply to it! Start a conversation with people. Jump into a conversation on someone elseβs photo. People really do read conversations in comments, and having followers doesnβt mean a lot if theyβre not engaged. So engage them.
- Tag people in posts and comments.Β Again, the circular nature of IG appears when you begin tagging people in either your posts or your comments. Doing so shows that youβre engaged with the community, and as you make friends and start getting to know them, you will either see or post things that you want them to see.Β Look at this awesome design I did with @elegantthemesβ Divi!, for instance. Whether itβs a brand or an individual, sometimes they will see that kind of thing and share it on their page (which can net a ton of followers and engagement for you).
Embed Your Photos, Donβt Link to Them
People love sliders. You may love sliders. And image galleries. Iβd bet $5 that youβve Googled WordPress Instagram feed plugin or something similar, right? And I bet you found a lot of options too, because there are a lot of great Instagram plugins out there. Itβs a photo-centric network, so of course you want to show off your pretty, pretty pictures.
Those donβt tend to get you followers, though. TheyΒ can, but they donβt necessarily link back to the original post in a very intuitive way. You can, however, embed your IG posts directly into your siteβs posts and pages. If done correctly and placed within some of your highest-traffic posts in lieu of traditionally hosted images, you can passively grow your Instagram followers easily.
This needs to be done in a full desktop browser, not on mobile. So go to your Instagram page (though it works from anyoneβs, technically), pick the photo you want to embed, and expand it. Then click the ellipsis in the lower-right of the modal, hit embed, and it will bring up another modal where you can copy the embed code.
After that, itβs just a quick trip to the WordPress dashboard and the post/page editor. Make sure youβre in the Text tab, not Visual. Paste in the embed code wherever you want to place it. (You can also use the Divi Code Module for this, too. Plus, you can embed a post into a sidebar or footer through any widget that accepts HTML.)
When thatβs done, you have given your readers the perfect opportunity to follow and engage with you. They can click the Follow button right there on the post, and they can even like and comment on it β or just read through the conversation thatβs already there.
Embedding your posts is anΒ amazing tactic to get followers on Instagram. But it shouldnβt be used for every image on your site. Each embed loads its own external scripts and extra CSS styling, which when used too much, can slow load times. You also wonβt get the boost to SEO from images, alt text, and all that lovely stuff.
But when used correctly, youβll really see a real boost to your Instagram followers.
Now You Know How to Get Followers on Instagram! Yay!
Unfortunately, the days of just tossing a few hashtags in and going about our business are behind us. With stories and a surge in users, getting followers on Instagram ainβt what it used to be. You canβt just shout into the night and expect people to find you, much less follow you. You have to have a strategy. And you basically already have to know how to get followers on Instagram, or youβre not going to get any. Or at least enough to make the platform work for you.
And now you know. Youβve got the strategies that are working for folks, and itβs time to go out there, hashtag your heart out, and make as many new internet friends as you can.
How do you get Instagram followers these days? Letβs share strategies in the comments!
Article featured image by Vas_artists
Valuable information i must say and thanks for bringing this to light.
wow ! its interesting ! good π
Never buy them if you want long lasting engagement with your followers. I personally use hashtags when marketing products or services on Instagram. One of my favorite tools would be Hashatory. This hashtag suggesting tool helps me target a specific market by providing a group of related hashtags for my keyword on a search volume or tier that I preset. I find it very easy to use for both big and small campaigns.
Yes! This! So much this! I really don’t get why people buy followers if they want engagement. I gotta check out Hashatory, too because you seem to do exactly what I do for marketing that way. π Thanks, Kristel!
This is the best article i ever read about gaining followers on Instagram
Holy cow, that’s high praise! Thanks a bunch for that.
Nice Tips Sir… So far I do not know if imstagram is a great way to grow our business online. And maybe I am one of the late to know this.
It really can be if you commit to it. For instance in my town, there are multiple local businesses that started out selling their products on Instagram and taking orders through DMs, and they were eventually able to branch out into a storefront and an ecommerce store online.
It takes effort as much as anything, and being successful there and growing a brand is different since it’s a social network than others (I don’t even begin to say I know the inner workings of how to start a store on there, etc.), but it’s definitely an option for folks who have that drive and business acumen.
Awesome post! The fact that Instagram suggests hashtags is really helpful, yet still not as easy as it is with Plann. The app allows you to organize your hashtags in sets and copy & paste them into your post. You can create multiple sets, on different topics. Plann also shows you how many times a hashtag has been used – plus, it’s easier to see which ones to avoid because they’re colored with red. π
Oh, I am totally checking that out. π
Thanks a lot for this post. I have never heard about the possibility to embed my IG post directly on my blog. It’s very useful option to be done, I think.
It’s turned out to be pretty useful for me. And you can always edit the dimensions in the generated code so you can size it how you want since it’s just HTML in there.
Are there any plans to add Instagram support to Monarch?
On that topic, I’d also like to know a suggestion for a good social media plugin that has Instagram in it. I’ve started using this one (Social Media Widget by Acurax) and really like the ease of setup and the designs but it doesn’t
have Instagram.
Ian, I don’t know, personally. I know one of the limiting factors before was the Instagram API didn’t allow for sharing until super recently, and I haven’t heard of much Monarch stuff lately myself. If you’re looking for follow additions, there are some good plugins out there like Divi Booster that add Insta in different places, and we have this blog post to help ease some of that, too https://www.elegantthemes.com/blog/divi-resources/how-to-add-more-social-media-icons-divi
And Karlopa, are you looking for a plugin that is more for sharing or for gaining followers?
Also, if you are using the Divi Builder, our Social Account module in the builder has Instagram in it, and I’ve used it a ton, myself. Here’s a pic: https://imgur.com/a/GsuZ0
Thanks for the tips Keeton! I haven’t been focusing in the social media side of things and its about time I offer this to clients too. Keep it up!
It’s always a tough call on when and to offer social to clients. When you get it right, the value you can add to packages and services you offer just skyrockets. Good luck with it! π
Great points, BJ. I’ve seen a lot of instagram posts overusing hashtags and people following other accounts blindly. It’s still quality over quantity. π
Yeah, it really is. I am doing a lot of experimenting on my own account right now to see how different ratios of hashtags and placement and timing affects engagement and that sort of thing. It’s interesting, but good golly is it more complicated than it used to be.