A new Meta feature is designed to take the guesswork out of content creation. The tech company’s Trial Reels let users share their latest short-form content among new viewers before pushing it to their current followers.
Trial Reels can currently be enabled on Instagram, where creators will find a “Trial” toggle on the share screen. Once the option is turned on, the selected upload will be served to a select number of non-followers and will be hidden from the creator’s content grid. Some followers may happen upon the trial upload by receiving it in a DM or searching for a sound it uses.
After 24 hours, data from the trial run will be available, and creators can decide whether they want to move forward with the video. The “share with everyone” option turns the trial Reel into a normal upload. Instagram can also automate that process by automatically sharing Reels if they perform well during trial periods.
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For Instagram creators who have long been flummoxed by the mysterious inner workings of social media algorithms, Trial Reels offer a way to see whether particular video concepts will resonate with Instagram’s viewers and its recommendation technology. Instagram previously looked to foster innovation on the Reels feed by promoting original content over reposts. Now, imaginative creators have another tool they can use to experiment with far-out ideas.
Of course, just because a video jibes with random Instagram users doesn’t mean it will click with a specific group of followers, but Instagram claimed that early users of Trial Reels enjoyed their experience with the feature. “We’re already seeing early success from creators who have had access,” reads a Meta blog post. “They report that their fresh content ideas are performing well with both new audiences and existing followers.”
Pre-upload tests have become a preferred tactic for creators who like to push boundaries and unlock the secrets that govern recommendation algorithms. One of the reasons the streaming service Nebula was launched was to give creators an exclusive window they could use to try out ideas that might not be right for another platform. YouTube gave its creator community the ability to optimize their videos by letting them pick out multiple thumbnails for individual uploads. That level of A-B testing, preferred by stars like MrBeast, has become common on YouTube. Now Instagram Reels creators will get the chance to do something similar.