After using Social Booster for a bit, it is only natural to wonder how it really works underneath. If you have spent some time with it, you have probably asked yourself what is actually going on behind it.
A lot of people assume it is just about pushing content out, but that is not really the case.
Under the hood, it works more like a scoring system than a simple campaign tool.
Every profile builds a reputation over time based on what it actually does. Not just posting, but how that content performs, how consistent the activity is, and how real the interactions look.
There is a formula behind it that weighs all of this, so not every account is treated the same. Someone who has been active, consistent, and driving real engagement will naturally carry more weight than a fresh or low quality account.
We also track patterns that usually point to bots or artificial activity, so inflated numbers do not get rewarded the same way. The idea is to make sure visibility comes from real participation, not just volume.
In the end, it is less about who posts the most and more about who actually brings attention that matters.
You want to see how it works in practice or how your activities are evaluated in real time, you can try here - https://t.co/u4p5YSvu2M
A lot of people look at AIDA and think there is too much going on or that it might be complicated to understand at first.
But when you break it down, it is actually pretty straightforward.
At the core, it comes down to four parts that all connect with each other in a simple way.
- LaunchZone is where things start, where you can create and launch.
- Prediction Markets are where people take positions and express what they think will happen.
- Social Booster is where attention builds and projects get visibility.
- And the Trading Terminal is where all the activity comes together and trades happen.
Each part has its role, and once you see how they fit together, the whole system starts to feel much more intuitive.
If you were wondering how AIDA works, this is really all there is to it.
Polymarket had it right all month.
$75.5M said BTC hits $75K in March → 100%.
It did.
Now March 26:
→ Dipped below $70K → confirmed 100%
→ Recovery above $71K by midnight → 50/50
Market's telling you: support is being tested.
50/50 bounce = no conviction either way.
Perfect range to trade. $70K floor or break.
→ https://t.co/AxOraSVnOk
Being early in a narrative market has always created an advantage. When a new idea starts gaining attention, the first people who recognize it usually benefit the most because prices have not yet adjusted to the level of interest that is about to arrive.
The pattern appears again and again in financial markets. When Bitcoin first crossed $1,000 in 2013, very few people believed it could become a trillion-dollar asset. Ten years later it passed $1T in market value, rewarding the earliest believers who acted before the wider market understood the narrative.
The same dynamic appears in prediction markets. Early traders often react to information before it becomes obvious to the broader public. As new data spreads through media, social platforms, and news cycles, more participants enter the market and prices begin adjusting to reflect the new consensus.
This is why narrative markets move so quickly. Attention forms first, belief follows, capital enters, and probabilities shift as more people participate. In active markets, even a 10-20% change in probability can happen within hours when new information spreads.
Understanding narratives early does not guarantee being right, but it gives participants more time to evaluate information, compare probabilities, and decide whether the market is mispricing an outcome.
You can follow how narratives evolve in real time by watching aggregated prediction markets directly inside AIDA and seeing how probabilities move as new information reaches the market.