You are what you post on Instagram! What does your Instagram say about you?
Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 3:41 am
People often tell me that they would like to open an Instagram profile but don't know what to post on it, so they ask me to inspire them and give them a good idea. My answer is always the same – post what interests you and what you feel passionate about or at least interested in, otherwise you will quickly run out of ideas, will, inspiration and desire.
Abandoning your profile and giving up on it is something that happens often, especially to those who go into the whole thing with the wrong assumptions. Some think that Instagram will pay them if they get bangladesh whatsapp list lot of followers (it won't, Instagram doesn't pay anyone anything), some think that they will become famous (there's a very small chance of that unless you're Jennifer Aniston), they think that it's easier than it is (it's not, as anyone who has posted at least one picture knows) and that everyone will go crazy for their content (it won't).
Instagram, at least when it comes to private users, should be and remain fun as it was originally intended. A social network for sharing beautiful pictures and, if you really like writing, inspiring text or advice.
Those who do use it in this way, often without even thinking about it, set a specific theme that they stick to. And while every digital marketer, including me, will tell you that it's essential to set a theme and not deviate too much from it, many unknowingly set a theme that they stick to and enjoy.
Recent research conducted by a British mobile operator showed that as many as 64% of Instagram users have created an online persona that they hold onto that is not necessarily identical to the person they actually are.
People on social media generally portray a more ideal and better version of themselves, and they are also more likely to post more optimistic and beautiful content that will improve their mood and make them feel better, at least for a moment.
This is precisely why social media is obsessed with fake lives, making things look better than they are, and pumping up one's own ego. People want to get validation for their work, admiration from followers, and a boost in self-confidence from social media.
However, research shows something else, and that is that whatever pictures you choose, they still say more about you than you might think. You are what you post on Instagram. Whether that's true or not (the truth is probably somewhere in between), no one can say for sure, but this is what your Instagram feed says about you.
Abandoning your profile and giving up on it is something that happens often, especially to those who go into the whole thing with the wrong assumptions. Some think that Instagram will pay them if they get bangladesh whatsapp list lot of followers (it won't, Instagram doesn't pay anyone anything), some think that they will become famous (there's a very small chance of that unless you're Jennifer Aniston), they think that it's easier than it is (it's not, as anyone who has posted at least one picture knows) and that everyone will go crazy for their content (it won't).
Instagram, at least when it comes to private users, should be and remain fun as it was originally intended. A social network for sharing beautiful pictures and, if you really like writing, inspiring text or advice.
Those who do use it in this way, often without even thinking about it, set a specific theme that they stick to. And while every digital marketer, including me, will tell you that it's essential to set a theme and not deviate too much from it, many unknowingly set a theme that they stick to and enjoy.
Recent research conducted by a British mobile operator showed that as many as 64% of Instagram users have created an online persona that they hold onto that is not necessarily identical to the person they actually are.
People on social media generally portray a more ideal and better version of themselves, and they are also more likely to post more optimistic and beautiful content that will improve their mood and make them feel better, at least for a moment.
This is precisely why social media is obsessed with fake lives, making things look better than they are, and pumping up one's own ego. People want to get validation for their work, admiration from followers, and a boost in self-confidence from social media.
However, research shows something else, and that is that whatever pictures you choose, they still say more about you than you might think. You are what you post on Instagram. Whether that's true or not (the truth is probably somewhere in between), no one can say for sure, but this is what your Instagram feed says about you.