Most businesses want more engagement on social media. Few know how to get it.
Social platforms give you a direct line to your customers. Posts, ads, DMs — you can reach people in ways that feel personal. But if nobody's liking, sharing, or commenting, none of that matters. A profile with zero interaction is just a billboard nobody drives past.
So here's what works.
Create a Regular Posting Schedule
A lot of companies start their social media push by flooding their feed with content. The thinking is logical: more posts, more visibility. But it tends to backfire. Too much too fast and people tune you out — or hit unfollow.
The sweet spot depends on the platform. On Facebook, once a day is plenty. Push past two posts a day and you'll start annoying people. Instagram is similar — one post a day works well, and you can stretch to three without losing followers, but only if the content is worth it.
What matters most is consistency. Posting twice on Monday and then going quiet until Thursday is worse than posting less often on a predictable schedule. Pick a rhythm, stick to it, and watch your analytics. If a schedule isn't working, change it. But give it a few weeks before you decide.
Use High-Quality Images
People scroll fast. They're not stopping for a wall of text.
Images break that pattern. They take up space in the feed and you can understand them in under a second without reading a word. That's why posts with visuals consistently outperform text-only posts.
But a bad image can hurt you more than no image. Blurry, pixelated, or poorly lit photos signal that you don't care — and people extend that to how you'd treat them as a customer. Use clear, well-composed visuals. Play with color. Make people want to stop scrolling.
Ask for User Generated Content
Your followers can do some of your content work for you. That's the whole point of user generated content.
Ask your audience to tag you in posts related to your product. Running a launch? Tell people to share their experience and tag your account. Then pick the best ones and repost them (with permission). It shows real people using your stuff, which is far more credible than anything your marketing team produces.
Want more submissions? Run a contest. Give the winner a discount, a free product, something worth competing for. People will participate if there's a real incentive.
Pose Questions
Questions get comments. It's that simple.
When you end a post with a question, you're giving followers an easy reason to respond. They don't have to figure out what to say — you've already told them. Keep the questions short and connected to what your brand does.
Look at Goodreads's Facebook page for a good example. They ask followers about favorite books, what they're reading over the weekend, which genre they can't put down. Simple questions, but they routinely pull hundreds of comments. That's the kind of engagement most brands are chasing.
Create Videos
If images stop the scroll, videos hold attention.
A good video can make someone feel something — curiosity, excitement, trust. You can layer in music, visuals, and real customer stories in a way that a static image just can't match. And people buy based on how they feel about a brand, so that emotional connection matters.
Keep them short. TikTok changed what people expect from video content, and that expectation has spread to every other platform. Long videos lose viewers fast. Make your point quickly, make it well, and stop.
Storytelling helps too. A video that follows a real problem and a real solution is easier to remember than one that just lists features. When someone needs what you sell, you want them to think of you first.
Do Live Videos
Live video creates a different kind of interaction than polished, pre-produced content.
When you go live, your followers can watch and respond in real time via comments and chat. That back-and-forth is something pre-recorded content can't replicate. It feels less like broadcasting and more like a conversation.
Before you hit "go live," know what you're going to do. Have a loose script or at least a clear purpose. A rambling live session won't help your credibility. But a focused, genuine one — a Q&A, a product walkthrough, a behind-the-scenes look — can build real connection with your audience in a way that other formats don't.
Get More Social Media Engagement
Want better results but don't have the bandwidth to execute all of this?
That's where we come in. Our team works with companies to build and run digital marketing strategies that move the needle — more traffic, a stronger social presence, and marketing that fits how your business works.