I Posted Daily on Social.My Phone Barely Rang.
I was convinced volume would solve it. More posts, more visibility, more leads.
I'd see a service business with 500 followers posting three times a day and think that was the play. But after six months of grinding content, I realized I was shouting into a room where nobody was listening for what I was selling.
The issue wasn't the quantity, it was that I created content about me, not about the problem my audience was trying to solve. A plumber posting about their new truck isn't as useful as a plumber showing the three signs your water heater is about to fail.
A designer talking about their process isn't as magnetic as one breaking down why a client's site wasn't converting, then fixing it on camera. BrightLocal's social research shows service businesses get the most traction when they educate, not broadcast.
I flipped the script. Instead of here's what we do, I asked what question do my customers ask me every week, then answered it in a 60-second video or carousel.
Engagement shifted, and so did inquiries. When you solve a real problem people are already thinking about, they don't need convincing, they need to find you.
That's where our social media work starts. Our Florida Local Search Index keeps showing useful, specific content out-converts polished self-promotion.
Write down the five questions clients ask most before hiring you. Pick one and create a single piece of content answering it completely. Post it, then watch which gets the most saves and shares. That's the seed of your next ten posts, and it's about them, not you.
