Front-loaded likes (everything in the first two minutes) leave a recognisable shape that Instagram’s anomaly classifier discounts. A drip-feed across the first 25 minutes fits the natural log-decay engagement curve, scoring 0.78–0.91 on our residual fit and getting full ranker credit. The math is below; so is the easy version of how to set this on your own plan.
One of the only meaningful differentiators in the auto-likes market is delivery pacing — and almost nobody explains it. We ran the numbers; here’s the version that doesn’t require a stats degree.
What an organic engagement curve looks like
Pull engagement-by-minute data for any organic post and the shape is the same: a fast climb in the first 60–90 seconds (early followers + push notifications), a peak around the 3–6 minute mark, then a long log-tailed decay over the next 45 minutes. Mathematically:
L(t) ≈ A · t^α · exp(-β·t)
where t = minutes since publish
α ≈ 0.4 (early ramp exponent)
β ≈ 0.08 (tail decay)
A scales with audience sizeThat fit holds across audiences from 1k followers to 4M with an average residual under 0.12 on log scale. Instagram’s anomaly classifier — the model that decides whether a burst of likes is suspicious — uses a similar fit as a baseline and flags posts whose actual curve deviates more than ~2 standard deviations.
What instant delivery looks like to the classifier
“Instant” providers ship the entire likes total in the first 120 seconds. The shape of that delivery is a near-vertical wall:
L(t) = N at t=0..2
0 thereafter
residual against organic ≈ 1.7 (anomaly threshold ≈ 2.0)That residual sits right at the edge of the classifier’s tolerance. On accounts with already-elevated engagement (verified, blue check, big creator) it’s usually fine. On small or medium accounts, it tips into the “discount” bucket: the like counter on the post still climbs, but the ranker applies a confidence penalty to those likes when computing distribution.
Drip-feed: how to fit the organic curve
What you want is a delivery curve that approximately looks like the organic one. We aim for:
- ~25% of total in the first 3 minutes (early ramp).
- Peak at the 5–7 minute mark.
- ~70% delivered by minute 18.
- Long tail finishing around minute 25–28.
That curve scores 0.78–0.91 on our residual fit (0 is identical, 1.0 is one standard deviation away — safely inside the classifier’s tolerance band).
Why this matters in real money
The classifier penalty isn’t binary, it’s a multiplier on ranker weight. From 12 weeks of A/B data on our own panel inventory:
| Delivery mode | Reach lift vs control | Sample size |
|---|---|---|
| Instant burst (≤2 min) | +8% | 31,400 posts |
| Compressed (≤8 min) | +19% | 28,900 posts |
| Drip-feed (25 min) | +27% | 42,100 posts |
| Drip-feed (45 min) | +24% | 9,700 posts |
Above 25 minutes the lift starts dropping again, because the confidence window is closing. There’s a sweet spot.
How to set this on your plan
On the BuyLike.net order form, the “Likes per post” range controls the total. The pacing curve is fixed at the optimal 25-minute drip — you don’t need to set it. We tested every customisable-pacing variant we could think of in the spec phase and found that exposing it as a knob mostly resulted in users picking the worst option.
“The fastest way to make a paid-engagement service look obviously paid is to let people pick a delivery curve.”
Three pacing myths
“Faster delivery = more visibility.”
False. Faster delivery raises the residual against the organic curve, which costs you ranker credit. The same likes spread out give you more reach.
“Random delivery is even better.”
False. Random delivery has a higher residual than any structured curve, organic or not, because real engagement is not random — it has a clear early peak and a decay tail. We pace deterministically and it scores better.
“Spreading over a day looks more natural.”
False. Real posts collect 70–80% of their lifetime likes in the first 30 minutes. Spreading over hours leaves the cold- start window starved and the late activity contributes nothing to ranking.
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