Real news, real insights – for small businesses who want to understand what’s happening and why it matters.
By Vicky Sidler | Published 20 September 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
If you’ve ever watched rugby on the TV while scrolling Instagram on your phone and answering a WhatsApp message with your elbow, congratulations. You’re living the South African digital dream.
And Instagram just made it a bit easier.
According to Meta’s latest announcement, the platform now has a dedicated iPad app. Reels are front and centre. The app is made for big screens, couch sessions, and that blurry space where entertainment and engagement blend together.
And here’s the kicker: it’s not just about viewing. It’s about how we create, consume, and communicate across multiple screens—and what that means for small business owners trying to keep up.
South Africans spend 9.5 hours a day on screens
Instagram has launched a new iPad app focused on Reels
The app introduces a Following tab with “All,” “Friends,” and “Latest” views
New features are optimised for multitasking and lean-back browsing
The big screen format changes how creators and brands show up
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix
Instagram’s New iPad App Puts Reels on the Big Screen
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FAQs on Instagram’s iPad App and What It Means for Small Businesses
What’s different about the new Instagram iPad app?
Why should small business owners care about this update?
How does the Following tab affect visibility?
Do I need to start creating different content just for iPads?
What does “lean-back entertainment” mean in marketing terms?
How can I make sure my Reels hold up on a big screen?
Do I need to change my posting strategy?
Where can I get help creating a clearer message for Reels and social content?
Because 5 hours on your phone plus 4 hours in front of the TV is not enough, apparently.
Research shows South Africans now spend nearly 9.5 hours per day looking at screens. Over 5 of those are on mobile. Another 4+ on TV. This isn’t a side effect of remote work or digital fatigue. This is the new normal.
And when that much screen time happens, people start doing everything at once. You’ll see someone watching sports, texting friends, and scrolling Reels with the casual focus of a fighter pilot.
Instagram knows this. That’s why the new iPad app opens straight into Reels. No browsing. No fumbling. Just content, big and loud.
Yes, you could always technically use Instagram on an iPad. But it was a stretched-out version of the iPhone app, like watching a VHS tape on a 4K screen.
Now, the app actually fits. Here's what changed:
Open the app, and you’re dropped right into Reels. That’s not an accident. Instagram wants creators (and fans) to think of this as a lean-back experience. You’re not just scrolling. You’re watching, relaxing, maybe even learning.
For small business owners, this means the content you make for Reels needs to hold up on a 10-inch screen. Low-res graphics, weak sound, or blurry text won’t cut it anymore. Think less meme, more mini-documentary.
The app now includes a clean, three-option Following tab:
All: Everyone you follow
Friends: People you follow who also follow you back
Latest: Posts and Reels in order of when they were posted
You can choose which tab to show first. This gives users more control and makes it easier to catch content that might otherwise get buried.
As a brand, if someone follows you, they’re more likely to actually see what you post—especially if it’s recent, relevant, or personal. Translation: now is a very good time to get consistent with your content.
Comments and video now live side by side. Messages and notifications appear together. It’s all built for fast interaction and fewer taps.
For creators, this means engagement is easier. Viewers can comment without pausing the Reel. And for viewers, this means comments become part of the content.
As a business owner, if your comment section is dry or full of spam, fix that. People will be reading it on a bigger screen.
Instagram’s move to iPad is not just about screen size. It’s about audience habits, content expectations, and platform shifts.
If you’re a small business posting Reels, this is what to keep in mind:
Reels now live on phones and iPads. Your visuals should be clear, bright, and large-text friendly. Sound should be crisp. Lighting matters. Subtitles help. Yes, this all sounds like work. It is. But blurry, rushed Reels won’t hold attention on a bigger screen.
Just because the screen is bigger doesn’t mean people are more patient. They want to be pulled in fast. StoryBrand principles are more useful than ever. Be clear. Show transformation. Lead with something real.
If you’re showing up on a screen next to a viral cooking fail or a dog with a panic attack, you need to earn attention. Quickly.
This launch makes Reels more accessible in chill settings—couch, bed, maybe even meetings if we’re being honest. It’s a chance to reach your audience when they’re relaxed.
But relaxed doesn’t mean bored. If your message isn’t interesting or useful, people will keep scrolling. That’s why clarity and purpose still beat trend-chasing.
I talk to a lot of small business owners who feel like they should be on every platform, creating daily, doing lives, replying to comments in real-time. It’s exhausting.
Instagram’s iPad app makes it easier to consume content—but not necessarily easier to create it well.
So don’t panic. You don’t need more content. You need better content.
And that starts with one clear message that connects everything you post. That’s why I created the 5-Minute Marketing Fix. It helps you write a sharp, simple one-liner that works everywhere—iPad included.
Instagram’s iPad app is a direct response to our screen-heavy lives. This article explains how hyper-connectivity is changing what customers expect—and how small businesses can adapt without burning out.
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If you’re thinking “do I really need to make content for iPads now too?”—this one’s for you. Learn how human flexibility still outperforms AI in the creativity department.
Feeling overwhelmed by Instagram’s latest updates? You’re not alone. This article helps you focus on what matters in your marketing, instead of chasing every shiny new feature.
Creating content for multiple devices requires real problem-solving skills. This piece breaks down the human vs AI debate and why blending both gives you an edge.
The new app is built specifically for iPads, not just a resized phone version. It puts Reels front and center, adds a new Following tab with custom feed options, and includes multitasking features like side-by-side comments and videos.
Your audience is now consuming Reels on bigger screens in more relaxed settings. That means your content needs to be clearer, better lit, and more engaging to stand out. This update changes where and how your content shows up.
The Following tab lets users choose what they want to see first: all accounts they follow, mutuals, or chronological posts. If you're posting helpful, timely content, there's now a better chance it will be seen—especially by people who actually care about your brand.
Not necessarily. But you should check that your current Reels look and sound good on a larger screen. That might mean higher resolution visuals, subtitles, and better lighting. Don’t just create more—create smarter.
It means your audience is watching passively, not interacting heavily. Think YouTube binge or scrolling Reels while lying on the couch. Your content needs to grab attention quickly and deliver value without requiring too much effort.
Start with strong storytelling. Use clear visuals, large readable text, crisp sound, and subtitles. Make sure your content is relevant, well-paced, and easy to follow—even with the volume off.
Not entirely, but it’s a good time to review what’s working. Posting consistently, using clear messaging, and engaging with your audience still matter. If you’ve been posting without a plan, this is your cue to get one.
You can start with the5-Minute Marketing Fix. It’s a free tool that helps you write a one-liner that builds trust and keeps your content focused—whether it’s showing up on phones, tablets, or anywhere else.
Created with clarity (and coffee)