Bumping this comment up which was initially done under youtube post
, this is actually a very common scenario—accounts getting banned. Your YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook accounts can all be banned. These are volatile constraints. The key is ensuring that these constraints don’t wreck your business, and this can be handled in a few ways. 1. Maintain Multiple Accounts on the Same Platform
Have multiple social accounts on the same platform. Keep one as your main account, and use another as a backup. Store all your content on the backup account, keep it hidden or private, and only make it public if your main account gets banned. This ensures you always have a backup ready.
2. Understand the Algorithm Reset Risk
If your main account gets banned, you will lose your followers, and the platform’s algorithm will lose its pre-trained data that helps distribute your content to your audience. This means you will have to start from zero and retrain the algorithm to match your content with the right audience.
3. Mitigate Algorithm Re-Training
This issue can be mitigated by maintaining a separate database of your audience. From this database, you can create lookalike audiences and quickly re-target them using paid ads. This helps the algorithm relearn your audience much faster and reduces the impact of starting over.
4. Reduce Platform Dependency Lastly, don’t rely too heavily on YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook. Siphon traffic from these platforms to alternatives like Rumble, which are less volatile when it comes to account bans. This strategy has been proven to work, as seen in cases like Andrew Tate.