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Instagram’s Originality Mandate Forces a Shift in Social Operations

Instagram’s recent crackdown on reposted content, which now extends to photos and carousels, has effectively ended the era of volume-based social media management. For agencies and teams juggling multiple accounts, the platform’s pivot toward original production requires a fundamental overhaul of how they maintain individual account credibility and growth.

Bio & NewsJuly 7, 20261,128 reads0

The policy update, which gained momentum in April 2026, restricts recommendation eligibility for accounts relying on unoriginal content. This move hits harder when paired with existing barriers, such as the 1,000-follower requirement for Live broadcasts. For smaller or emerging accounts, these hurdles mean that traditional strategies—like light curation or cross-posting identical assets—no longer guarantee visibility.

Eleanor Xie, CMO at GeeLark, argues that platforms are now explicitly rewarding authentic, independent operation. For teams managing dozens of profiles, this shift necessitates moving away from shared, monolithic content calendars toward workflows that treat each account as a distinct entity. Modern operations must now balance centralized oversight with the specific, mobile-native execution required by the platform’s algorithms.

GeeLark’s cloud-phone platform attempts to bridge this gap by offering Android-based cloud environments for each account. By moving beyond simple browser-based scheduling tools, teams can maintain separate operating environments for publishing and maintenance. As Instagram continues to elevate the criteria for content quality, the ability to maintain a differentiated, mobile-native presence has become the new operational standard for professional social media management.

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