In SMM services price almost always reflects the source and durability. Cheap packages often give a sharp influx that later “crumbles” (drop) and sometimes spoils the account's metrics. Quality services grow smoothly, last longer, and come with a replenishment guarantee (refill). Let's break down how to read a service card and order without harming the account.
What drop and refill are
Drop is the loss (unsubscribes/disappearance) of part of the boosted metrics over time. It is almost inevitable with cheap bot sources. Refill is a guarantee to replenish this loss within an agreed period (e.g. 30 days): if followers “crumbled”, they are topped back up to the ordered volume. Always check two parameters on the card: whether refill is included and for how long.
Cheap vs quality
- Source: bot networks give an instant but crumbling volume; “real” sources (incentivized users) are pricier but more stable.
- Speed: an instant dump of thousands of followers is a red flag; a natural service spreads delivery out.
- Transparency: a real service never asks for a password and works only with a public link/profile.
- Guarantee: the presence of refill and a clear term is a sign the seller stands behind durability.
How to order without harm
A sharp metric spike is suspicious both to the platform and to a live audience: a sudden jump in followers lowers trust. So spread volume over time and keep the metric ratio believable (followers, likes and views should grow proportionally, not “10,000 followers and 3 likes”). Start with a small test order on a new service, assess durability, and only then scale.
Frequently asked questions
- Do SMM services ask for the account password?
- No. A real service works only with a public link to the profile/post and never asks for a password. If a password is requested — that is an attempt to steal the account; refuse.
- What to choose if durability matters?
- Take a service with an explicit refill guarantee and a smooth delivery speed, not “the cheapest and most instant”. On the card, check the source, the refill term and the speed. A small test order will show the real durability before scaling.