How small businesses, nonprofits, and schools can use social media to build real relationships — and why that matters more than follower counts.
Here's the thing nobody tells you when you set up a business Facebook page: posting about yourself isn't social media marketing. It's just posting.
Social media marketing is what happens when you show up consistently, listen to your audience, and contribute something genuinely useful to the conversation. That's the version that builds trust. And trust is what eventually turns followers into customers, donors, or students.
Social media is not you telling people that what you're doing is awesome. That's marketing. Social media is you doing things and people telling you if it's awesome or not.
— LukeW, quoted by Warren Laine-Naida
The good news? You don't need a big budget or a big following. You need a clear purpose, a consistent presence, and the patience to let relationships build. Think of it as the digital version of your front counter — the place where people decide whether they like you before they spend any money.
💡 Social media is free. You have access to anyone, in any country — businesses, customers, collaborators — 24 hours a day, without paying for reach. Your marketing budget will thank you.
The most common mistake small organisations make with social media is trying to be everywhere at once. They open accounts on five platforms, post inconsistently on all of them, burn out, and then tell me "social media doesn't work."
It works. But it rewards focus. Pick one platform where your audience actually spends time, and do that one well. You can always expand later.
Best for B2B, professional services, and nonprofits seeking corporate partnerships or donors.
Still the strongest platform for local community groups, events, and reaching an older demographic.
Strong for visual businesses — food, design, health, education — and reaching 25–45 year olds.
The world's second largest search engine. Ideal for how-to content, tutorials, and building authority over time.
Fast-growing discovery platform. Strong for reaching younger audiences with short, direct, and genuine content.
Excellent for thought leadership and being found by AI tools. Answer questions in your area of expertise.
🔗 Social media and SEO reinforce each other. An active social presence builds the brand mentions and off-page signals that help your search rankings. Learn more in our Organic SEO guide.
Social media doesn't exist in a vacuum. It's one spoke in a larger wheel — and the hub of that wheel is your own website. Your social presence drives traffic, builds awareness, and earns trust. But the content your audience engages with most should ultimately live somewhere you own.
Conversations don't just happen like magic or well-programmed AI. The tools we need are strategy, empathy, and focus.
— Warren Laine-Naida, Why Small Biz Still Needs Social Media
Social signals also contribute to your AI visibility. When your brand is mentioned and discussed across platforms, AI tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity are more likely to recognise and cite you. This is the GEO benefit of social media — every mention is a small signal of trust. See our GEO guide for the full picture.
| Personal Use | Business Use |
|---|---|
| Share what you like | Share what helps your customers |
| Casual, unplanned posts | Planned, strategic content |
| Friends and family audience | Customers and community audience |
| Fun, self-expression | Value, trust, and service |
Let's make sure the key ideas have stuck.
1. What is the most common mistake small businesses make with social media?
2. What does the 3-2-1 daily rule suggest?
3. How does social media contribute to AI visibility (GEO)?
True or False?