A post with a wall of likes reads as worth paying attention to before anyone reads the caption. People trust what other people already approved, so reactions on a post are pure social proof. The same photo or offer feels important with a few hundred likes and forgettable with three. Those likes are the nudge that makes a scroller stop, read, and react instead of swiping straight past.
Facebook watches how fast a post picks up reactions to decide who else should see it. A post that gathers likes quickly signals that it is landing, and the algorithm responds by showing it to more of your followers and beyond. We deliver the likes gradually from active, real-looking accounts so that signal looks genuine, which is what turns a quiet post into one that keeps spreading.
This is the move when you have a specific post that matters, a launch, an announcement, a piece of content you want people to actually see. You give that one post the early traction it needs to break out, instead of letting it die in the first hour the way most posts do. All we need is the public link to the post itself.