Because Followers are potential energy, but Views are kinetic energy. You can have 50,000 Instagram Followers, but if they are inactive or the algorithm is hiding your posts (which it does to 90% of your audience), your follower count means nothing. This is the "Dead Profile" Syndrome. When a brand or a potential partner looks at your page, they check your "Engagement Ratio." If they see 50k followers but your Reels only get 200 views, they immediately know your audience is fake or dead. It destroys your credibility faster than a scandal.
Buying views is about Reactivating the Pulse. When you inject views into your content, you are signaling to the algorithm that your content is relevant now. This often triggers a "Re-engagement" protocol, where Instagram starts showing your post to more of your own existing followers who haven't seen you in a while. High view counts force the system to push you back into the feeds of your dormant audience. You are jumpstarting the heart of your account.
Moreover, views are the primary metric for Social Validation on video content. A user scrolling through Reels decides whether to watch a video in milliseconds. If they see "1.2M Views," they stop. It’s the "Crowd Effect." They assume there is something worth seeing. If they see "12 Views," they scroll past.
By buying Instagram views, you are buying the user's attention span. You are purchasing the benefit of the doubt. But remember, once they stop to watch, you need to keep them there. And if they like what they see, you need to encourage interaction. That’s why intelligent growers also
buy Instagram Comments to create a conversation loop that keeps the algorithm interested for days, not just hours.
A viral video with a silent comment section is a statistical anomaly that screams "Bot Farm" to both users and auditors. You need the noise to match the crowd size. By layering comments on top of views, you solidify the illusion of a hyper-active community that brands are desperate to sponsor. This is the psychology of the herd: nobody wants to be the first to dance on an empty floor. By simulating a packed room, you lower the social inhibitions of real users, making it 'safe' for them to follow, like, and buy. You are priming the pump so the real water can flow.