Social Media · 6 min read

Social media for small business in 2026: less is more.

By Dave Kerpen · April 2026

I wrote a New York Times bestseller called Likeable Social Media in 2011. Sold a few hundred thousand copies. Built a social media agency on the back of it. So I have some credibility when I say this:

Most small businesses are wasting their time on social media in 2026.

The game has changed. Organic reach on Facebook is below 2%. Instagram has become a paid-only channel for most businesses. TikTok dominates attention but converts at a fraction of a percent for most local SMBs. The economics that made social marketing magical between 2010-2018 don't exist anymore.

What still works

Here's what still works for small businesses on social, ranked by ROI:

  1. Google Business Profile posts. This isn't really "social" — it's free, it shows up directly in your Google Maps listing, and almost no SMB does it. Two posts a week with photos. Done.
  2. Customer-generated content. Repost when customers tag you. Ask for it explicitly: "Tag us, and you'll get 10% off your next service." Cheaper and more credible than anything you'll create.
  3. Instagram Reels (if you're in a visual category). 60-second behind-the-scenes content. Nothing fancy. Once a week. Reels still get organic reach because Meta is still pushing them.
  4. TikTok (if you're young or in a trendy category). Same content as Reels, posted to both. Might pop. Might not. Don't bet the business on it.
  5. LinkedIn (if you're B2B). Personal post from the owner once a week. About the business but in a personal voice. Has had a quiet renaissance.

What no longer works

Be honest with yourself if you're still doing any of these:

None of this moves the needle for a local SMB anymore.

The one platform rule

Pick one platform where your customers actually are. Just one.

For a local florist, that's probably Instagram. For a B2B accounting firm, LinkedIn. For a pre-school, Facebook. For a Gen-Z-targeted nail salon, TikTok.

Post on that one platform consistently — once or twice a week, every week, for a year. Don't even create accounts on the others until you've nailed your one.

The best content marketing I've seen from small businesses was always one platform, deeply done. The worst is always five platforms, half-assed.

What to actually post

For 95% of local small businesses, the content formula is:

Most SMB social feeds are 80% promotional. Flip it. The brand voice should feel like a conversation with the owner, not a billboard.

The 80/20 of social media for small business

If I were starting a local small business tomorrow and had 30 minutes per week for social media, I would:

  1. Post one Google Business Profile post with a fresh photo (5 min)
  2. Post one Instagram Reel of behind-the-scenes work (15 min)
  3. Reply to every comment, DM, and tag from customers (10 min)

That's it. Thirty minutes. Half the impact of agencies charging $2,000/month.

Where social actually still drives revenue

For most local SMBs, social media in 2026 is a trust signal, not a sales channel. Customers search you on Google, see you have a real Instagram with 200 followers and recent photos, decide you're real, and book.

That's it. That's the job of your social. Not viral growth — credibility. Once you internalize that, you stop chasing follower count and start posting like a real human running a real business.

Which, by the way, is the only kind of social content that's worked since 2007.

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