Publishing a Reel and watching it underperform is one of the most frustrating experiences in content creation. You put real effort into the concept, the filming, the edit — and then the analytics show a fraction of your followers even watched past the first two seconds.
The problem usually isn't the content itself. It's the hook. And the only way to know for certain is to analyze the numbers Instagram gives you — if you know what to look for.
This guide walks you through how to read your Reel insights properly, what each metric actually tells you, and how to use a free AI tool to get an instant breakdown of what's working and what isn't.
Where to Find Your Reel Insights
Instagram surfaces three insight tabs for every Reel:
- Overview: Views, accounts reached, average watch time, follows gained from the Reel, and profile visits it drove.
- Engagement: Likes, comments, shares, saves — and the calculated rates for each (what percentage of viewers did each action).
- Audience: Follower vs. non-follower split, top age groups, gender split, top country, and traffic sources (Home, Reels tab, Explore, profile, etc.).
To access them: open the Reel in your profile, tap the three-dot menu (or the insights icon below the video), and select "View insights." For the full breakdown, go to your Professional Dashboard.
The Metrics That Actually Tell You If Your Hook Is Working
Not every metric on the insights screen is equally useful. For diagnosing hook performance specifically, focus on these:
Average watch time. This is the clearest signal of hook strength. If your average watch time is under 25% of your Reel's total duration, viewers are leaving almost immediately — typically within the first 1–2 seconds. A strong hook keeps people watching and pushes average watch time above 50–60%.
Skip rate (listed as "Exits" or implied by low watch time). Instagram doesn't always label this directly, but it's visible in the engagement breakdown. A skip rate above 30% is a red flag. It means a significant portion of viewers who saw your Reel in their feed decided not to watch it.
Non-follower reach percentage. Found in the Audience tab — the percentage of your views that came from people who don't follow you. High non-follower reach (above 50%) means the algorithm is distributing your content widely, which is a strong signal that the hook is compelling enough for the Reels tab and Explore.
Share rate and save rate. These are the two strongest indicators of genuine value. Shares spread your content to new audiences; saves signal that viewers found the content worth keeping. Even a 2–3% share rate is meaningful for most accounts.
What a Good vs. Weak Hook Looks Like in the Data
A Reel with a strong hook tends to show:
- Average watch time above 50% of total duration
- Non-follower reach above 40–50%
- High traffic from the Reels tab (algorithm is distributing it)
- Low exit rate in the first few seconds
A Reel with a weak hook typically shows:
- Average watch time under 25%
- Reach dominated by existing followers (the algorithm didn't pick it up)
- Most traffic from the Home feed (people who already follow you)
- Low shares and saves despite decent like counts
Likes are the least reliable indicator. Many people double-tap reflexively while scrolling, without watching more than a second or two. Don't optimise for likes.
How to Use a Free AI Tool to Analyze Your Reel
Manually reading these signals is doable once you know what to look for. But diagnosing the root cause — and knowing specifically what to change — requires connecting multiple data points at once.
Brika's free AI Reel Analyzer does this automatically. You upload screenshots of your Reel's Overview, Engagement, and Audience insight tabs, and the AI returns:
- A viral score from 0–100 based on how your metrics compare to Instagram benchmarks
- A hook verdict (strong/weak/unknown) with specific reasoning
- A list of problems ranked by severity — high, medium, low — with benchmarks for comparison
- A list of strengths worth doubling down on
- Prioritised recommendations ordered by impact
It's free, requires no account, and takes about 30 seconds. The tool reads all three screenshot tabs for maximum accuracy, but works with just the Overview tab if that's all you have.
What to Do With the Analysis
Once you have your breakdown, the priority order is straightforward:
- Fix high-severity problems first. If the AI flags your hook as weak and your average watch time as critically low, your next Reel's first 3 seconds need a complete rethink before anything else matters.
- Double down on confirmed strengths. If your save rate is high, it means people find your content valuable. Identify what made it save-worthy and repeat it.
- Test one change at a time. Don't overhaul everything simultaneously. Change the hook format on your next Reel, keep everything else the same, and compare the watch time data. That's how you build genuine understanding of what works for your specific audience.
The Bottom Line
Analyzing Instagram Reels doesn't have to be guesswork. The data Instagram provides tells a clear story once you know the language — watch time and skip rate for hook performance, share rate and save rate for content value, non-follower reach for algorithmic distribution.
Use the free AI Reel Analyzer to shortcut the diagnosis. Then use what you learn to make the next Reel meaningfully better.