The world's largest social network is not dead—it's just different. Facebook has evolved into the dominant platform for communities, local businesses, and reaching the 35+ audience that other platforms underserve.
Quick Hits
Best Time To Post
Wednesday through Friday, 1–4 PM drives the strongest engagement for most business content. Tuesday 11 AM–1 PM is also strong.
For Groups, engagement peaks are different: evenings (7–9 PM) on weekdays and weekend mornings perform best since community members check in during personal time.
For Facebook Reels, follow TikTok timing principles—evening posts (7–9 PM) get stronger initial velocity because more people are scrolling.
Posting Frequency
For Pages: 1–2 posts per day maximum—posting more than twice daily consistently reduces per-post reach (the algorithm spreads your total reach budget across more posts). 5–7 posts per week is a healthy cadence.
For Groups: post 1–3 times per day as the admin, but let members post freely. Active groups with daily member activity are ranked much higher than admin-only content.
For Reels: 3–5 per week. Facebook Reels use the same Reels feed as Instagram—if you've made a Reel for Instagram, turn on cross-posting to Facebook for free distribution.
Who It's Really For
Facebook is for businesses and creators whose audience is 35–65, local businesses with a geographic customer base, community builders running groups around shared interests or professions, and anyone running paid advertising at scale.
Facebook's organic reach for pages has been declining for years—but Facebook Groups are a completely different story. Groups generate some of the highest engagement numbers in social media, and Meta continues investing heavily in the Groups product.
For paid media, Facebook's ad platform remains unmatched for targeting precision and cost-efficient reach. Even if your organic Facebook presence is small, Facebook Ads reaching a well-defined audience can outperform almost any other paid channel.
What It Rewards
Facebook's 'Andromeda' algorithm update in 2025 shifted the platform back toward meaningful social interactions. The key signal now is shares to private messages—when someone sends your post to a friend via Messenger, that registers as a very high-value endorsement signal.
Reels on Facebook get distributed to non-followers (like TikTok's FYP model)—this is currently Facebook's best organic reach format. Groups content gets distributed within the group and to non-members who might be interested based on the group's topic.
Important quirk in 2025: Meta began testing a cap of 2 organic link posts per month for non-verified pages. If you're posting links frequently, this limits your reach. Unverified pages that post links heavily are seeing significant reach reduction.
Practical Moves
- Start a Facebook Group aligned with your niche or customer base. A group turns passive page followers into an active community—and group content gets far better organic reach than page posts.
- Cross-post your Instagram Reels to Facebook automatically. Same content, different audience (Facebook skews older), zero extra work.
- Put links in the first comment of posts rather than in the post body itself. Write "link in first comment ↓" in the post. This sidesteps the link reach penalty.
- Create content specifically designed to be forwarded via Messenger. Ask yourself: "Would someone send this to a friend?" Things like useful summaries, surprising stats, and relatable humor trigger private sharing.
- Use Facebook Live for community Q&As and product launches. Facebook Live still gets 6x more interactions than regular videos, and Meta prioritizes live content in the algorithm.
- If you run paid ads, use Facebook as your awareness and retargeting layer—not your conversion layer. Facebook tells you WHO to reach; let email or Google handle the conversion.
Hook Ideas
- "Question to my community: [specific question relevant to your niche] — what's your experience?"
- "I don't usually share this kind of thing, but this is worth knowing: [valuable insider information]"
- "Hot take that [profession/interest group] won't like, but needs to hear:"
- "Before you [do the thing], read this. I wish someone had told me sooner."
- "The [tool/strategy/approach] we've been using for [result]. Here's exactly how:"
- "Asking for a friend: [relatable situation that others will tag real people into]"
What Feels Tired
Posting links from other websites with zero original commentary. 'Good morning!' posts with a stock photo of coffee. Spammy engagement tactics ('Like if you agree!'). Event invitations to people who've never heard of your brand. Posting the same promotional content your followers have seen from you five times already.
Making Money Here
Facebook monetization for creators in 2026:
1. In-stream ads on videos. Facebook places ads in videos over 3 minutes long and shares revenue with creators. Requires 10,000 followers and 30,000 1-minute views in the last 60 days. Revenue shares vary by niche—educational and finance content earns the most.
2. Facebook Stars. During live streams and on video posts, followers can send Stars (each worth $0.01). Similar to TikTok gifts or YouTube Super Thanks. Works best for creators with loyal, engaged communities.
3. Paid online events. Facebook lets you charge admission for Facebook Live events. Useful for workshops, classes, and online events with your community.
4. Group subscriptions. You can charge members for access to exclusive Facebook Groups ($4.99–$29.99/month). Best for professional networks, accountability groups, and exclusive learning communities.
5. Facebook Ads (the bigger opportunity). For most small businesses, the real Facebook money isn't in creator monetization—it's in using Facebook's ad platform to drive customers to your website or store. Facebook Ads remain one of the most cost-effective advertising platforms available.
Platform Health 2026
Facebook isn't cool, but it's massive. With 3.1B monthly active users, it's not going anywhere—and it's the dominant social platform for the 35–65 demographic in most of the world.
Meta continues investing heavily in Groups, Reels, and AI-driven discovery. The biggest headwind is declining organic page reach, which has been a trend since 2012. If your Facebook strategy relies entirely on organic page posts, you'll struggle. If it incorporates Groups, Reels, and selective paid promotion, Facebook is still one of the most effective marketing platforms available.
Recommended Tools for Facebook
These are the tools we actually recommend for this platform—scheduling, analytics, design, and growth. No need to go hunting.
Experts to Follow
Your Facebook Strategy in Plain English
Your Facebook strategy in plain English: Stop trying to make your page go viral and start building a community instead.
Create a Facebook Group for your niche, audience, or customer base. Post valuable content inside it daily. Let members participate. Use your page primarily to cross-post Reels (from Instagram) and direct people to the Group.
For paid media, Facebook is still the most precise audience targeting available. If you're not using Facebook Ads to promote your best-performing organic content to lookalike audiences, you're leaving significant reach on the table.
Explore the Full Toolkit
See all the scheduling, analytics, and design tools we recommend across every platform—with notes on what each one is actually good for.