A single product shot can now become whatever the moment calls for. A different scene, your branding, a fixed flaw, a promotional overlay.
AWeber's AI image editing is now live in the AI Signup Form Builder, and it's coming soon to the AI Landing Page Builder and AI Email Builder.
Improve any image with a text prompt
Add your branding
Stock photos and basic product shots rarely come with a logo already on them. Describe what you want added, and now they do.
Put your product in a scene it was never photographed in
Take a plain studio shot and place it somewhere that sells the lifestyle: a campsite, a kitchen counter, a desk setup. Describe the scene, and the same product appears in it.
Fix what's wrong with the photo
Bad lighting, a busy background, an awkward crop. Instead of redoing the shoot, describe the fix.
Add a text overlay that looks designed
Drop in a promo code, a callout, or a headline styled to match the scene, not just placed on top of it.
Each edit saves as its own file, and the original stays in the library too. So testing a new direction never means starting over if it doesn't work.
How it works
1. Add an image to the AI Signup Form Builder
2. Describe the change you want
The more specific the prompt, the better the result.
Start with a brand-new image
Image generate skips the photo entirely. Describe what you want and the AI builds it from scratch.
Try it in your account now
This is live in the AI Signup Form Builder right now. It's coming soon to the AI Landing Page Builder and AI Email Builder. too.
We’re unpacking how to define the business value of social media. Frankly, if measuring and communicating the value of social was cut-and-dry, every marketer would already be doing it. But there are no easy answers, or one-size-fits-all equations or attribution models.
Only 44% of marketing leaders say their teams are “experts” when it comes to measuring the business value of social, per The 2025 Impact of Social Media Marketing Report. Yet, 80% are reallocating funds from traditional marketing channels to social anyway. There’s an instinctual understanding that social drives business value, but teams still struggle to prove it.
We sat down with Carmen Vicente, Social Media Manager at Gorgias—a conversational AI platform for ecommerce brands—to find out how her team measures the ROI of social. She explained why discovering its true impact can be a moving target (and why that doesn’t have to be a negative thing).
Note: This article was originally published on September 8, 2025. It has been updated with timely data.
The business value of social media, according to marketers
According to the Impact of Social Report, more than two-thirds of marketing leaders are confident that social generates brand awareness. Yet, as we face a tumultuous socioeconomic climate, top of funnel metrics like awareness mean less.
Over half of these leaders believe that social drives customer acquisition, customer loyalty and revenue. Though they aren’t as confident in their team’s ability to tie social to those outcomes.
Instead, most leaders define social ROI with engagement (68%) and conversion (65%) metrics. Only 57% tie social impact to revenue.
In Vicente’s experience, how social is measured varies by industry. “As someone who came from the B2C space, my feelings about social ROI have changed quite a bit since I entered B2B. In B2C, much of my reporting was engagement-focused, leaned into emotional storytelling and was based on vibes. In B2B, data is king. If you can’t tie your efforts to revenue, you’re going to struggle contextualizing your impact organization-wide.”
The lack of consensus surrounding how to measure social is unsurprising. But Vicente argues this might work in teams’ favor: “Social media isn’t static. If the way you measure it is, then you likely have a problem. At Gorgias, ROI is an ongoing conversation quarter-to-quarter. We’re always redefining how we want to measure it. When I first joined, our systems for thinking about social ROI were traditional and conventional. Since then, we’ve developed processes that are project-based and tied to marketing deliverables that ladder up to greater business objectives. To successfully measure social, we have to mirror the speed it moves at.”
Social intelligence goes untapped
While marketers conceptually understand that social drives awareness, engagement, conversions and even revenue, many leaders and teams aren’t connecting real-time social intelligence to business value. Social intelligence drives cross-functional business outcomes like improving customer retention, identifying new audience segments, adjusting messaging and strengthening executive decision making.
For example, a customer complaint that surfaces on social could lead to a product fix that positively impacts the bottom line, but only if that data is shared beyond the marketing team.
But this disconnect isn’t for a lack of understanding. According to The 2026 Social Intelligence Report, 67% of marketers agree that social intelligence insights are very important or mission-critical to the long-term success of their company.
Yet, only 15% of marketers report ever looking at real-time social intelligence dashboards, and only 18% review insights on a quarterly basis.
Organizations that fail to operationalize social intelligence are underutilizing a valuable data source and operating with a delayed understanding of their market. And in an environment where consumer preferences and competitive dynamics shift daily, that delay is a direct threat to growth.
The challenges of defining the business value of social media
The speed of social is only one aspect that makes its impact hard to measure and value difficult to maximize. The larger challenges lie in shifting closely-held philosophies.
Even as more investment moves to social from traditional channels, leaders still often retrofit social data into conventional measurement systems. But non-linear customer journeys (like the ones driven by social search and community management) can’t be fully captured by old models. And The Social Intelligence Report found that the largest barrier to turning social insights into action is the outdated belief that social is just a communications channel, not a strategic insights function.
“I’m always trying to cram our social successes into frameworks that have existed in SaaS for a long time. That feels like trying to push a square peg into a round hole. That’s not to say these existing frameworks don’t work, but they’re built around sales or partnerships. Social is an amorphous blob that doesn’t always fit neatly into preexisting categories,” says Vicente.
Incompatibility between social media management tools and martech stacks
Poor tech integration shoulders much of the blame. Over half of all marketing leaders say incompatibility between their social media management tools and the rest of their marketing tech stack is the #1 reason they aren’t able to understand social’s impact on their business, per the Impact of Social Report. Less than half say their teams embed social data into any CRM software.
And while 91% of marketers at social-first organizations say they allocate a dedicated budget for social intelligence tools and platforms, that’s only true for 57% of marketers at non-social-first companies, per The Social Intelligence Report.
This puts social marketers in a precarious catch-22. They need to develop the skills to share cross-functional insights. But they also need tools that surface compelling data and integrate with other sources, and leaders who ensure this integration is at the top of their analytics’ teams priority list.
Not enough executive support
When executives support social teams and help get analytics infrastructure prioritized, it moves the needle.
Teams who are experts at proving social’s business value are more likely to use social media management tools and cross-functional reporting software, and have their leaders’ confidence in their ability to perform. They’re also less likely to struggle with setting up reliable attribution models.
Vicente experiences this first-hand. “There’s a lot that hinges on how much the C-suite believes in the impact of social. Gorgias’ CMO encourages me to pitch ideas, and we’ve worked together to measure the success of our efforts based on campaigns, projects and other marketing objectives rather than a baseline impression model. Because of that, I’m able to act more creatively and strategically rather than out of fear of falling short of KPIs or making the algorithm gods unhappy.”
Internal knowledge gaps
According to The Social Intelligence Report, marketing is the department most likely to use social insights. But the real value comes from sharing the data with customer experience, product and R&D teams.
For that to happen, teams need to democratize access to social and share reports that go beyond engagements and conversions.
Of course, you’re not entirely out of the woods once you have data. When sharing insights cross-functionally, social marketers have to translate for internal audiences who don’t always “get” social in a professional sense.
“Inside of the marketing bubble, I feel comfortable speaking in strategic terms about the work I’m doing and the goals of the content team. Outside of marketing, I’m guilty of downplaying social’s importance or the complexity of our strategy because I want to make it seem fun and engaging. As social marketers, we hone storytelling capabilities for our content everyday. We need to leverage those same capabilities when we speak to colleagues and leaders cross-functionally,” adds Vicente.
The challenge of honing internal data storytelling is felt throughout the industry. Practitioners and marketing leaders say communicating performance metrics to internal stakeholders are among the most important skills social teams need, per The Sprout Social Index™.
How doing less (with more intention) translates social into business value
In any conversation about social ROI, there’s a natural impulse to want to do more. But the reality is that many teams are already being pushed to the max, and publishing more for the sake of volume creates less space for analysis and strategy. Most individual contributors on the social team say they spend more than half of their time on operational education vs. strategic insights work.
It’s especially challenging when the call to do more comes from leaders. Per the Impact of Social Report, 71% of Marketing Directors and 69% of CMOs believe their teams must increase their social media publishing volumes if they want to increase business impact. Only half of social media managers agree.
Instead, more dedicated time and resources toward social intelligence could lead to better business decisions and greater value for organizations.
Vicente summed it up poignantly: “When I first started at Gorgias, I was too overzealous about trying to break into new platforms. I wasn’t considering the sage advice to meet your customers where they are. As a social marketer at a B2B company, I wish I had spent more time experimenting on LinkedIn rather than spreading myself too thin by going on a million networks.”
Instead of chasing publishing frequency or trying to find a home for your brand everywhere, identify broader audience truths, and incorporate them into your content and reporting. Help educate leadership that what matters most to audiences isn’t that you’re all over their feed—it’s that you truly understand them.
Even small experiments help make your case
And when you get a feeling in your gut telling you to try something new, start small, test as you go and use data to prove your hunch.
At Gorgias, their biggest ROI unlock is employee advocacy. Vicente explains, “Last year, I ran a beta test comparing content posted on my personal page vs. the brand LinkedIn account. The result was staggering, and affirmed how the LinkedIn algorithm treats personal accounts differently than brand pages. So in Q1 2025, we launched an advocacy program with just 20 team members. By the end of that quarter, we surpassed 1 million impressions and it became our most successful social initiative by far. That was the kind of proof I needed to bring the program company-wide.”
You can use the same beta test framework to make the case for launching a creator program, investing in a video SEO strategy or building social intelligence infrastructure that finds the deeper signals from social media activity. For example, pick one social campaign or initiative and turn it into a social intelligence experiment that you can use as a proof of concept.
Redefining the business value of social media
Defining the business value of social media isn’t about chasing a perfect formula—it’s about building the right framework for your team, your industry and your goals.
As Vicente shared, the most impactful measurement strategies evolve as quickly as social itself. Whether through smaller experiments, regularly redefining ROI or bringing executives into the conversation, progress happens when teams stay flexible and intentional.
The real business value of social comes not from fitting into outdated models, but from proving—through compelling, social-first data storytelling—how it drives loyalty, growth and competitive advantage.
Download The 2026 Social Intelligence Report for more on how you can bridge the intelligence gap and turn real-time social signals into your enterprise’s greatest competitive advantage.
Between running day-to-day operations and managing admin work, marketing is the last thing many small business owners want to worry about. And it’s not because they don’t think it’s important. Rather, it’s because they don’t always have the resources for it, often lacking the budget to buy ad space and the staff to oversee elaborate campaigns.
Social media levels the playing field, offering a channel to effortlessly get your small business in front of a bigger audience.
This is especially relevant now that consumers are using social media to search and find products. As the latest social media stats show, social media platforms drive 60% of product discovery.
With the right strategy, small business owners can use social media to exponentially grow their reach and sales. In this post, we share practical social media marketing tips for small business owners, covering everything from platform selection to content planning. Let’s dive in.
Why social media is non-negotiable for small business marketing
With small budgets and even smaller workforces, small business owners need marketing channels that are effective, affordable and easy to manage.
Social media offers just that, with free built-in marketing tools and a massive reach. Social is where people go to tap into cultural moments and connect with friends. It’s where they get entertained and find buying inspiration.
And now that social search is evolving, it’s easier than ever for businesses to get discovered. Not to mention the opportunity to reach new audiences through algorithmic discovery.
For small business owners, this is an opportunity to drive brand awareness without the heavy marketing budget.
But social’s role goes beyond simply getting your business in front of the right audience. It lets you directly connect with consumers through comments and direct messages, giving you the perfect channel to engage your community.
In fact, personalized customer service is the top expectation consumers have for brands in the 2025 Sprout Social IndexTM. The brands that stand out on social are the ones engaging with their followers and promptly responding to customers. 73% of social users will even buy from a competitor if a brand doesn’t respond to them on social.
Your marketing dollars go further when you speak to a very specific audience. Start with a clear idea of the people you’re targeting with your small business social media strategy.
Build a comprehensive audience profile that breaks down the demographics of your ideal audience. How old are they? Where do they live? What kind of work do they do? You can use the insights from your native analytics to find out your audience demographics.
Additionally, tools like Meta Audience Insights and TikTok Audience Insights provide you with psychographic data on your audience. So you can enrich your audience profile with information about their interests, values and hobbies. These audience insights will help you build a strategy that resonates with the right people.
Focus on quality over platform quantity
Trying to maintain brand presence on every single platform is time-consuming and overwhelming. You’ll find yourself struggling to post consistently and keep up with conversations across multiple platforms.
It’s better to focus your time and resources building a strong presence on the platforms your audience actually uses.
Consider the ideal industry and demographics intersection to figure out the right platform fit. For example, tech conversations thrive on X (formerly Twitter), but retail will see better engagement on visual platforms like TikTok and Instagram. Both platforms see strong usage from Gen Z, but Facebook is where you stand a better chance of reaching Baby Boomers.
Content pillars: 3-5 core topics or themes to anchor your content strategy (For example, case studies, user-generated content, how-to videos, industry tips, etc.)
Posting cadence: Timing and frequency of posts (For example, 1 post at 3 pm on Monday, Wednesday and Friday; and 1 post at 6 pm on Tuesday and Thursday.)
Sprout Social Essentials
Stop winging your content calendar.
Sprout’s Essentials plan gives you a visual publishing calendar, optimal send-time recommendations, and scheduling across all your accounts — built for small businesses that move fast.
You can build out your calendar as you add more post ideas along the way. Then block off some time every week for ideating and researching content, creating posts and scheduling them. Batch creating content makes it easy to stay ahead, so you always have a consistent supply of posts to fill up your calendar.
Sprout Social comes with a visual calendar to help you plan ahead and maintain a consistent publishing schedule.
Visualizing your content plan makes it easy to mix things up between different content types and formats to maintain audience interest. According to The State of Social Media 2026, consumers want to see brands posting educational content and community-focused content. Episodic content and behind-the-scenes also rank high among consumers.
Lean into short-form video content
No matter which platforms you focus on, short-form video is the key to engaging your audience. According to the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report, users are most likely to interact with short videos across Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube.
And the shorter the better, with users preferring videos shorter than 60 seconds.
Create Reels, TikToks and Shorts that capture immediate user attention. Use them to share bite-sized tips, entertaining info and behind-the-scenes footage. This is a great opportunity to jump in on viral trends and use humor to entertain your audience.
Notice how Plaza Deli uses relatable humor about “the grindset” trend to create an Instagram Reel. This is the deli’s most successful post, with over 34k likes and thousands of shares.
Social media platforms use metadata from your captions (including in-video text) to rank content in relevant search results. Make sure to sprinkle in a few keywords naturally into your captions to improve content visibility.
Engage with your audience in the comments
People love it when you’re responsive and actively engaging with them. It’s one of the most effective ways to humanize your business and establish a connection with your audience.
As established in the 2025 Sprout Social IndexTM, consumers watch how you engage with your followers on social media. So when they see you responding to comments, they see a business that pays attention.
Plus, an active comments section looks good to the algorithm. It drums up engagement and helps your content get more visibility in people’s Feeds.
Ask questions in the caption or conduct polls to spark a conversation and encourage more people to comment. Then interact with those comments to acknowledge your audience and connect with them.
Even if it’s not viable to reply to every single one, make sure to respond to the most important ones. Think: comments that ask relevant questions or get a lot of Likes from other users.
See how Palms Thai Restaurant responds to the top comments on a Reel that went viral.
The 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report highlights how human-generated content is the most important priority for consumers. And what’s more “human” than content from your customers? Real people sharing real images and real experiences can help you build trust while nurturing connection with your existing community.
Encourage customers to share their reviews and post about your business on social media. Then get their permission to repost to your Stories. You could even take it further and repurpose user-generated content for your in-feed content or paid advertising campaigns.
Organize UGC around branded hashtags, so it’s easier to find content to repost. You can also check brand mentions and tagged posts to discover relevant UGC.
Maxi’s Rotisserie turns UGC into Collab posts on Instagram. This instantly maximizes content visibility as the posts get in front of both creators’ audiences.
Influencers give you a much-needed visibility boost, making them a vital addition to your small business social media strategy.
Focus on smaller creators with a niche yet highly relevant audience for your business. For example, gardening influencers who specialize in growing vegetables in the arid Nevada climate. Or food influencers who go around trying new food joints across your city.
Micro (10k–100k) and nano (1k–10k) influencers have a smaller following compared to traditional influencers. But considering their local relevance and audience alignment, they can be a much better fit for small businesses.
Use data and analytics to pivot quickly
When you’re running on limited resources, you need every single resource to go toward a strategy that works. That’s why data is so important to inform what’s working (and what needs to go).
Sprout social Essentials
Your analytics shouldn’t live in five different tabs.
Essentials brings your social performance data into one dashboard, so you can spot what’s working and cut what isn’t — without the spreadsheet gymnastics.
Native social media analytics tools can give you post-specific insights to understand what types of content resonate. Keep a close eye on metrics like reach, engagement rate, saves and shares. Use this to identify patterns like:
Which content formats are most effective for reaching non-followers?
Which content formats get the most positive engagement?
What content angles resonate the most?
What types of content drive actual sales?
For example, people might be more interested in seeing your finished nail art designs vs. videos of the process. Then fine-tune your strategy using these insights and get the most out of your marketing dollars.
Streamline your workflow with the right tools
Managing social media for small business owners is more than just posting the occasional content. You need to set aside time for creating the content and actively engaging with your audience. And that’s where it gets challenging because you’re already juggling your operational and admin tasks as it is.
So there’s not enough time to manually post content across all your social media accounts every day, let alone respond to comments.
Social media management tools make this easier with automated workflows that help you save time. For instance, platforms like Sprout will let you plan your content in advance and use social media scheduling to automatically post it at the desired time. Aside from the weekly or monthly time blocks for content creation, you can practically put your publishing on autopilot.
You even get data-backed recommendations on what content to post and when, helping you strengthen your social media strategy for optimal impact.
Work smarter, not harder on social media
Social media marketing can feel overwhelming when you’re already wearing multiple hats to keep the business running. Using an all-in-one management tool makes it more manageable with automated workflows and data-backed recommendations. So you no longer have to spend hours coming up with content ideas or manually posting content.
Sprout social Essentials
Social media management built for small business.
Sprout Essentials gives you everything you need to publish smarter, engage faster and grow your audience — without the enterprise price tag.
With Sprout’s Essentials plan, you can speed up publishing and automate analytics for your small business social media strategy. Get a free 30-day trial to see how it fits into your social media marketing workflow.
Instagram’s role in the social landscape is evolving, but its power to connect UK brands with active, high-intent buyers is stronger than ever. According to the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report, 32% of consumers plan to spend even more time on Instagram this year, a figure that climbs to 41% for Gen Z users.
This isn’t just passive scrolling; an impressive 60% of consumers actively interact with brand content multiple times per week on the platform. With UK marketers matching this energy, 69% are scaling up investment in Instagram, so it remains a vital commercial engine for brands looking to scale their inbound reach.
To build an Instagram marketing strategy that cuts through the noise, you must align your execution with shifting audience behaviours. We’ve mapped out today’s most significant Instagram trends across content types and strategic approaches to help your brand stay relevant, capture attention, and drive meaningful growth.
What are Instagram Trends?
Trends are popular social strategies used across the network that represent macro-shifts in how audiences interact with brands. In 2026, trends are defined by conversational, creator-led strategies that favour raw, native engagement over polished broadcasting.
They dictate not just what brands post, but how they build community and drive commercial revenue. For UK brands, navigating these shifts is critical. While 69% of UK marketers currently view their social content strategy as effective, maintaining that edge requires aligning with specific regional priorities.
Metric
2026 Data Point
Strategic Impact
Consumer Growth
32% of users plan to spend more time on Instagram.
Audience attention is expanding, not shrinking.
Gen Z Dominance
41% of Gen Z users plan to increase platform usage.
The network remains essential for capturing younger demographics.
Active Engagement
60% of users interact with brand content multiple times per week.
Instagram is a highly commercial, conversational space.
Marketer Investment
69% of UK marketers are scaling up resource investments.
Competition for feed visibility is intensifying.
You can’t manage a successful Instagram account without standout content. Here are the most impactful UK Instagram trends driving engagement today. If you’re looking for more Instagram content inspiration, explore our list of social media post ideas for the UK to find other ways your brand can engage with your audience.
If you’re looking for real-life inspiration and to stay ahead of the latest Instagram trends, consider attending one of the many social media marketing conferences in the UK this year.
Content series and repeatable formats
Short-form video (under 60 seconds) remains the undisputed king of engagement, driving a 52% interaction rate on the network. A repeatable format, whether it’s a weekly tip, a behind-the-scenes series or a themed challenge, gives your audience something to anticipate and return for.
Series work on Instagram because they:
Build algorithmic familiarity: Instagram’s system learns to push content that consistently earns engagement.
Reduce creative fatigue: the format is already decided—your team fills in fresh topics each week.
Create appointment viewing: turning casual followers into loyal fans.
UK coffee brand Grind runs a recurring “Coffee School” series on Instagram, teaching brewing techniques in short, branded Reels. Each episode follows the same visual template, making the series instantly recognisable in the feed.
Reels are the dominant content format
Reels now account for 50% of the time people spend on Instagram and reach over 2 billion users every month. For UK brands, this isn’t a trend to watch from the sidelines—it’s the format that defines the platform in 2026.
The brands winning with Reels share a few non-negotiable habits. They hook viewers in the first three seconds, design for sound-off viewing with on-screen text and captions, and blend entertainment with education. Product tags inside Reels turn passive viewers into active shoppers, making the format a direct line from discovery to purchase.
UK skincare brand The Ordinary regularly uses Reels to break down ingredient science in short, punchy clips. Their approach proves that even technical subject matter thrives in short-form video when it’s delivered with clarity and visual energy.
UK marketers are swapping transactional, one-off sponsored posts for long-term creator collaborations. Why? Because consumers crave authentic, human-generated content that feels native to the feed.
Gymshark & Huel: Both of these UK-founded powerhouse brands have mastered the long-term ambassador model. Instead of paying creators per post, they secure sustained partnerships with fitness and lifestyle creators. Because the partnerships are ongoing, the products feature naturally in the creators’ daily routines over months or years, which builds deep-rooted credibility and brand recall.
Social Selling and Frictionless Commerce
Instagram is no longer just a digital mood board; it is a critical sales engine. UK brands are increasingly blending entertainment with “social selling,” turning product discovery directly into in-app conversions.
Relatable imagery and video content
In the UK, resonating with your audience means creating content that feels relatable and taps into shared cultural references. Create content that reflects real-life experiences, addresses a desire or concern, and uses relatable language and visual cues to connect with your audience.
In 2026, raw and unpolished content consistently outperforms high-production posts. People want to see the real side of a brand—not a perfectly staged photoshoot. This shift rewards teams that prioritise speed and honesty over expensive production.
This means having a strategy that combines knowing what’s trending and performance data with a deep understanding of UK cultural references. You need to go beyond surface-level engagement to build meaningful, lasting connections.
For example, UK fashion brand Lucy & Yak have over 700k followers and promote inclusive, relatable content that directly targets their audience. They employ several tactics to engage their Instagram audience in the UK, including:
Lucy & Yak have honed in on Instagram for engaging video content. They use the network to share their sustainability and ethics, which their audience cares about.
Hashtag strategies
Instagram still uses hashtags, which means brands need them to be seen by the right UK users.
Create an Instagram hashtag strategy with a list of popular hashtags in your niche and how you’ll use them. Make sure you’re researching new hashtags regularly. You can also create unique hashtags for events, campaigns, product launches, UGC engagement and more. An evolving strategy will get your content in front of more people.
Instagram SEO: The New Search Engine
Instagram functions as a primary search engine, especially for younger demographics. Traditional SEO practices now apply directly to your profile. To maximise discoverability, UK brands must:
Optimise Bios: Write keyword-rich profile names and bios that clearly define your niche.
Use Natural Language: Craft captions that directly answer common questions your buyers are searching for.
Implement Alt Text: Add optimised alt text to every image for both accessibility and backend search visibility.
Leverage Geo-Tags: Surface your content in local UK search queries.
Evolve Hashtags: Use a mix of niche, campaign-specific, and broad hashtags, treating them as core metadata for your posts.
Treating your Instagram profile like a searchable landing page gives your brand a compounding advantage as more people use the platform’s search bar instead of Google.
Authenticity in the UK: connecting through shared values
In the age of AI, Instagram users in the UK expect authenticity from everyone they follow, brands and influencers.
Authenticity on UK Instagram is about being true to what your brand represents, and preserving those values in your content and how you behave on the network. Consider everything your brand does online, and ask why you’re doing it, and the messages and values you’re promoting while doing so. This will help you get closer to living and communicating your values on social.
For example, Mikaela Loach is a children’s author who posts reflective, open and honest content on her Instagram account about her life as a UK influencer and climate campaigner.
Popular UK Instagram content categories are diverse
Brands and influencers create a variety of content on Instagram, with many gaining popularity through their niche. Some of the most popular UK Instagram content categories roughly correspond with the most talked about topics online in the country.
These include food and drink, entertainment (including music, films and gaming), travel, beauty and fashion. Each of these categories has a notably interested audience in the UK, but their popularity can lead to increased competition.
UK Instagram trends in marketing
These are some of the leading marketing Instagram trends in the UK.
Celebrity collaborations
Alongside influencers, a popular trend on UK Instagram is content partnerships with celebrities. These partnerships allow brands to connect their products with recognisable faces that fans know and trust.
A great example is US-based hot sauce brand Frank’s RedHot, which recently expanded into the UK market. They’ve teamed up with Danny Dyer for a recurring content series on Instagram to tailor their product promotion to UK audiences.
Navigating the AI Contradiction on Instagram
Right now, there’s a massive disconnect between what UK marketers prioritise and what Instagram audiences demand. According to the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report, “experimenting with AI-generated content” is the top priority for UK marketers this year. But consumers demand the exact opposite: human-generated content.
If you want your Instagram strategy to succeed, you must strike a delicate balance. Flooding your feed with AI-generated posts will alienate followers who are craving authentic, human connection. Instead of using AI as a content-creation crutch, the most successful inbound marketers are using it as their ultimate social intelligence analyst.
Here is how you should be applying AI to your UK Instagram strategy in 2026:
Pivot to Social Intelligence: The true potential of AI isn’t in drafting captions or generating images, but in analysing content to gather timely audience insights.
Uncover Audience Cravings: Use AI tools to synthesize your performance data so you can clearly see your followers’ specific concerns, curiosities, and cravings. This ensures the content you create cuts through the noise.
Free Up Creative Time: Plug AI into your manual workflows, such as performance reporting and data analysis. Use the hours you get back to craft the stronger, human-generated short-form videos that your audience wants to watch.
By shifting your AI use from content generation to content analysis, you can scale your operations efficiently while keeping the human touch that UK consumers demand.
Humour as an engagement tactic
UK brands and influencers often use humour to build a recognisable brand identity. Aldi UK is a popular example with over 850k Instagram followers. They post light-hearted and often comedic content. These posts have helped build Aldi UK’s brand identity as an accessible, friendly supermarket brand. Aldi is a discount supermarket known for lower prices, so this comedic and lighthearted tone lends well to an open and welcoming brand ethos.
Think about what type of comedy works for your brand image. But don’t overdo it, as trying too hard to be funny can backfire.
UK Instagram trends in social commerce and monetisation
Instagram isn’t just for expanding your reach—it can also become a powerful sales channel for your business. By leveraging these Instagram trends, you can unlock new monetisation opportunities.
Social commerce through Instagram Shopping and Instagram Ads
Instagram Shopping now supports only Shops with in-app checkout, streamlining the buying experience so customers never leave the app. Brands can also tag products directly in Reels, Stories and grid posts, turning every piece of content into a potential storefront.
Social commerce in the UK is a huge trend, and using these features can represent a significant growth opportunity for brands looking to sell more products. Read up on the best tactics for selling on Instagram in the UK. This is particularly important if you’re trying to master using social media for retail in the UK.
Alongside posting content organically, Instagram offers brands the ability to create paid ads that can reach more users.
For National Pizza Day, Pizza Express combined an Instagram ad campaign with a free pizza giveaway at their restaurants. This was a smart campaign as it promoted UGC (user-generated content) and meant more people were visiting their local Pizza Express restaurants to take advantage of the free offer. Combining this promotion with National Pizza Day made the campaign topical and increased its ability to trend.
All advertising on Instagram in the UK is regulated by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA). They have set rules for social ads, including always stating clearly when you’re advertising something.
All brands and influencers have to follow these ASA laws when creating partnership campaigns, when promoting products and when managing competitions on social media, among other situations. It’s vital that you keep up to date with their regulations.
How to create a winning strategy around UK Instagram trends in 2026
Knowing the current Instagram trends is half the battle; now, you need to apply them. Here’s how:
Keep a pulse on your audience with social listening
With social listening on Instagram, you can track conversations as they happen across your account.
An intuitive platform like Sprout Social helps you instantly identify trends relevant to your audience, so you always know exactly what your followers expect.
Lead with authenticity
Another approach is to embed authenticity into every corner of your strategy. Create a content strategy that includes behind-the-scenes videos, interviews with real customers or day-in-the-life follow-alongs.
Content like this will give audiences a better understanding of who you are and what you stand for.
Pay attention to keyword optimisation
Writing long-form, engaging captions with a clear SEO approach and keyword strategy is a proven way of getting your content seen by more people and standing out from the crowd.
Pair your caption strategy with the Instagram SEO fundamentals covered earlier: keyword-rich bios, descriptive alt text and geo-tags. When every surface of your profile is optimised for search, the compound effect drives consistent organic growth.
With Sprout’s AI Assist, you can get help writing engaging captions at scale. Small teams should also consider outsourcing this work to a creator.
Invest in micro-influencer collaborations
The most effective influencer collaborations rarely involve partnering with a big name. Campaigns are often more effective with micro-influencers that have 10,000 to 100,000 highly engaged followers.
As an example, English food producer Branston created a new potato brand, Nanna Tate, and partnered with food influencer Joe.Oxley on a unique recipe to engage his 50k+ followers who are all interested in food.
Going viral might still sound appealing, but sustainable success on Instagram is a long-term process that involves community building.
That means regularly responding to messages and comments, commenting on influencer content related to your niche and promoting and engaging with user-generated content. Use your brand’s Instagram account to foster meaningful connections with your fans and as a way of showing the human side of your business.
Keep up with the latest UK Instagram trends
With these UK Instagram trends and strategies, you can start to refine a stronger Instagram marketing approach. If you want to save time bringing it to life, start a free Sprout Social trial today and use our intuitive platform to drive smarter, faster results.
Instagram turns 16 this year, but its landscape in the UK is shifting faster than ever. While the platform’s overall dominance shows no signs of slowing, a major regulatory pivot is on the horizon.
With the UK government planning to ban under-16s from major social media platforms in Spring 2027 including Instagram, and switching off livestreaming and stranger communication by default for 16- and 17-year-olds, the era of unrestricted youth access is coming to an end. As the platform and its regulations mature, some brands must recalibrate their social strategies.
Discover the latest UK user stats, demographic shifts, and key digital marketing metrics. We’ll delve into exactly what has changed over the last year, what foundational truths remain the same, and how your brand can confidently navigate the rest of the year.
UK Instagram statistics that have changed in 2026:
The Gen Alpha Blackout: With plans to block social media access for under-16s from Spring 2027 and 16- to 17-year-olds facing heavy default restrictions, brands can no longer rely on young teenagers for explosive, top-of-funnel viral growth.
The Shift to Hard ROI: Vanity metrics are out. The influencer economy now demands hard performance data, prioritising Earned Media Value (EMV) and credibility scores to justify marketing spend to the C-suite.
Democratised Reach: The algorithm heavily favours short-form vertical video, allowing smaller accounts (under 10k followers) to achieve massive 20% view rates on Reels without needing enterprise-level ad budgets.
UK Instagram statistics that remain the same as 2025:
Unrivalled Engagement: Despite global shifts, the UK remains a powerhouse for screen time. Users still spend a massive 53 minutes per day on the app, far exceeding the global average.
The Core Purchasing Demographic: The 25–34 age group remains the largest and most lucrative segment (29.7%), demanding authentic, high-trust visual storytelling.
Static Ads Still Drive Revenue: While video is critical for discovery, in-feed static image ads remain the unsung heroes, driving 53.7% of global ad revenue with incredibly efficient CPCs.
What are the key Instagram usage statistics for the UK?
Instagram has roughly 35 million users in the UK and 2 billion globally, as of 2026. That’s almost 60% of the population over the age of 13. That makes the UK one of the top countries for Instagram use per capita.
Year-over-year growth in the UK has slowed—last year’s was 2.7% while it was 10% globally. This isn’t a cause for concern—Instagram is likely reaching a saturation point in the UK. As you’ll see below, the app is very popular.
How much time do UK users spend on Instagram?
People in the UK still use Instagram significantly more than the global average. UK users continue to spend an average of 53 minutes per day, or six hours a week, on the platform. What is changing is the global average. This year that has moved from 29 to 33 minutes per day—or just over three hours a week. While the UK remains a powerhouse for screen time, global adoption of immersive formats like Reels is dragging the worldwide average upward.
How many people have downloaded Instagram globally?
Instagram is the leading social media network in terms of downloads, with 3.8 billion downloads globally as of early 2025.
The exact number of downloads in the United Kingdom isn’t publicly available. However, given its healthy active user count and high time spent on the app, it’s likely that app download numbers are also high.
How often do UK users post on Instagram?
Roughly 95 million posts are uploaded to Instagram daily, worldwide. While Meta doesn’t publish country-specific data on posting, based on their high engagement on the platform, it’s likely that UK users contribute more than their fair share.
Who uses Instagram in the UK? 2026 demographics
Gender distribution
Globally, Instagram has a roughly equal split between male and female users, around 50.6% male and 49.4% female. But in the UK, it skews female.
The bulk of UK Instagram users are Gen Z and Millennials, but Gen Xers and Boomers are still active on the platform.
Here’s the current breakdown:
18–24 years: 19.1%
25–34 years: 30.5%
35–44 years: 20.7%
45–54 years: 13.8%
55–64 years: 9.8%
65+ years: 6.2%
Instagram’s core UK audience is maturing . A key difference we see in year-on-year Instagram data is that the 25–34 year olds are securely the largest segment. As the user base shifts solidly into their prime purchasing years, brands need to pivot their content from pure top-of-funnel entertainment to high-trust, conversion-focused storytelling.
Regional penetration
Instagram is used widely across major UK cities, but there is some regional variation both in the size of the user base and frequency of use.
Londoners use Instagram far more than any other city—more than half use Instagram once per month. After that, the highest percentage of Instagram users can be found in other major cities like Manchester, Leeds, Edinburgh and Glasgow, or student towns like Cambridge.
Usage is lowest in the North East at 29.6% and across Wales at 30.9%, where the median age is slightly higher than that of the rest of the UK.
In short, Instagram use is higher where the average age is younger.
6 essential Instagram marketing statistics for UK brands
Now that the basics are covered, take a look at the key stats behind the social network.
1. Popular Instagram post types
Check out a brief rundown of the different types of Instagram posts:
Instagram Reels are short-form, vertical videos designed to entertain or inform quickly. Instagram Reels often reach a wide audience due to Instagram’s algorithm favouring them over other posts.
Carousels are multi-image or video posts that users swipe through. Great for storytelling, tutorials or sharing detailed information in a visually engaging way.
Instagram stories are content that disappears after 24 hours. Ideal for behind-the-scenes, quick updates, polls and casual engagement. Use Instagram stories to engage your existing audience, not to reach new people.
Static images are single-photo posts that appear on your main feed. They’re best for striking visuals, announcements or clean branded posts.
Looking to launch an influencer marketing campaign to help you reach your target audience? The Instagram influencer economy in the UK is shifting away from vanity metrics (follower counts) toward concrete ROI (Earned Media Value). Marketers need this data to justify their ad spend to leadership.
Molly-Mae has one of the highest Instagram follower counts in the UK. She’s known for her chic, yet down-to-earth and relatable style. Collaborate with her on your next fashion, beauty or wellness campaign.
Earned Media Value (EMV): Reels EMV of €499K (7.34% average Reels engagement rate)
Niche: Comedy, entertainment, and lifestyle
Arron is one of the UK’s top online comedy talents, widely recognised for his hilarious public reaction videos and offbeat sketches. With an incredibly high engagement rate on Reels, he is perfect for brands looking to inject humour into their campaigns and reach a broad, highly active 18–34 demographic through viral-style content.
Earned Media Value (EMV): Estimated €100K EMV specifically on Reels
Niche: Business, entrepreneurship, and inspiration
Simon is the most followed business influencer in the UK, famous for his grassroots “#GiveWithoutTake” movement and inspiring street interviews. He’s on a mission to help people start their own businesses, making him an ideal partner for B2B brands, tech platforms, or financial services looking to connect with a motivated, highly engaged entrepreneurial audience.
Mega-influencer benchmarks are great for inspiration. But tracking follower counts and manual engagement calculations won’t help you prove real campaign impact to leadership. Right now, too many marketing leaders are stuck fishing for true business value in a sea of disjointed creator spreadsheets. To turn unpredictable creator partnerships into a reliable engine for business growth, your team must look past surface-level vanity metrics.
Sprout Social’s Influencer Marketing platform eliminates the guesswork by pulling accurate performance metrics directly via official network APIs. Instead of getting bogged down in manual tracking, your teams can automatically capture Earned Media Value (EMV), map out exact campaign ROI and build executive-ready reports showing how your creator strategy directly fuels your bottom line.
3. Popular hashtags on UK Instagram
While we recommend primarily choosing hashtags that best describe your niche, hopping on a popular Instagram hashtag with high search volume is also worthwhile. Like entering a lottery, you’ve got to be in it to win it.
Here are some frequently used hashtags in the UK, according to Tags Finder:
Great for sharing multiple related images, storytelling, tutorials or showcasing products. Engagement rates aren’t the highest, but having users swipe through the content increases time spent on the post, improving discoverability.
Small accounts (under 10,000 followers) achieve impressive 20% view rates on Reels, as the algorithm heavily favours short-form, vertical video for brand discovery. Short, engaging videos that capture attention quickly. Use these to attract new followers and to keep your audience engaged.
Brands with under 10,000 followers have seen a 35% increase in their Story reach rate. While engagement rates are typically high, Instagram stories last only 24 hours and are shared only with your followers. Use stories to keep your user base engaged and up to date.
5. Popular brand categories
Instagram is all about creating rich, aspirational video content—more so than any other social media platform. If you’re selling products with visual appeal or are associated with an aspirational aesthetic, you’ll find a natural home on Instagram.
Categories that shine on Instagram in the UK:
Fashion & apparel
With a predominantly female audience (roughly 55%), fashion and apparel thrive in the UK. Mega-influencers like Molly-Mae Hague (whose audience is 81% female) frequently collaborate with fashion brands like Adidas.
Fashion brands see an average 1.65% engagement rate on Instagram compared to 0.58% on Facebook.
Instagram Stories account for 25% of fashion campaign impressions.
Beauty & skincare
Creators actively partner with beauty and skincare brands, capitalising on the platform’s young, female demographic to promote products through tutorials and reviews.
Reels featuring fitness content see 2x the average completion rate.
6. Instagram ad reach
When it comes to advertising on Instagram, what we are seeing this year compared to last is that despite the hype around video, static image ads remain the bread and butter for revenue growth.
Instagram saw a 1% increase in potential ad reach in the UK. That’s 300,000 users. It may seem modest, but keep in mind that Instagram launched 16 years ago. It’s well past the explosive growth stage we’re seeing on TikTok. At this stage, a 1% increase is meaningful.
Conventional wisdom says that 3–5 times per week and sharing a daily story is the minimum you should post. This allows you to:
Remain top of mind for your existing customer base
Reach a wider audience
Experiment and adjust based on audience reaction
But can you overdo it? The answer is complicated but in short, yes. Overposting is an overlooked but important issue that needs to be considered.
Overposting can lead to:
Unfollows and mutes
Reduced engagement
Brand damage and a loss of trust
Less inspired content
But where do you draw the line? This is where it gets tricky—it depends on your audience. Our take? Experiment. Try upping your posts. If you’re met with an icy reception, you might be overdoing it. If your engagement is still going strong, keep cracking.
When is the best time to post on Instagram UK?
If you can only manage the bare minimum for an effective Instagram strategy, it pays to get your timing down. In fact, a handful of well-timed posts can be better than regular posting during off-peak times.
Here’s a quick breakdown of the best times to post per industry:
Retail & e-commerce: Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12 PM
Food & beverage: Saturdays at 11 AM
Health & fitness: Around 6 AM
Remember that these times aren’t ironclad, and there may be slight variations depending on your specific audience. We recommend you try Sprout’s ViralPost®. It algorithmically determines your best time to post based on your own data.
Social media marketing guided by insight—with Sprout Social
Instagram in the UK is a different animal. It has one of the highest penetration rates per capita, and users are on the platform for longer per month than anyone else in the world. In short, Brits love Instagram and smart marketers should take note.
But knowing trends is half the battle. The next step is to take action. That’s where Sprout Social comes in. With powerful analytics, content scheduling and performance insights tailored to your audience, Sprout makes it easy to act on the trends explored here.
Where a signup form sits on your page changes who fills it out. A form embedded in your content catches someone mid-read, already interested. A form in a sidebar catches someone who's scanning.
AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder now creates inline forms and places them on your site visually. Pick the spot on your live page, confirm it, and the form is there. No code required.
Create your inline form in seconds
Three starting points, depending on how you like to work.
1. Custom prompt: Describe what you want and mention it's an inline form for your site.
2. Fill-in-the-blanks: Answer a few prompts and select "embeds directly on my website" as your form type.
3. Template gallery: Browse the gallery and choose any inline template to start from.
All three start in the same form editor. Adjust your copy, design, and settings before you place anything.
Place it with four clicks
Once your form looks right, placing it takes four steps.
4. Your live site opens with the placement widget active. Click the section you want, then click "Confirm placement"
The placement widget shows your actual site, not a wireframe or a preview. You're clicking a real location on your real pages. Then you click confirm, and the form is there.
Works on self-hosted sites
This works on self-hosted sites: WordPress, Shopify, Wix, Squarespace, Lovable, and more. Each domain connects independently in Settings. If you manage multiple sites or client accounts, each form connects to a specific domain and placements stay organized across properties.
Put your form where your readers already are
Your content is already bringing people in. An inline form turns that attention into subscribers, without sending anyone to a separate page or hoping they notice a sidebar. Open the AI Signup Form Builder, build your inline form, and place it exactly where it belongs.