Wednesday, 20 May 2026

The impact of social media across every part of your business

Social media isn’t a digital billboard for your brand: It’s a portal to direct connection with your ideal customers and a pathway to powerful insights. From customer care to competitive research to crisis management, the impact of social media extends to every aspect of your business. And social intelligence, the application of social insights to business strategy, has become mission-critical.

According to The 2026 Social Intelligence Report, 80% of marketers say social intelligence is important to the growth of their business.

A bubble chart that demonstrates how important social intelligence is to marketers. 55% say very important, while 12% say mission-critical and 25% say somewhat important.

The same report found that four in 10 marketers used social intelligence to improve customer retention, identify a new target audience or market segment, and adjust their campaign strategy in real-time. Looking forward, 71% of marketing directors say social intelligence will become more influential than traditional research in shaping business strategy.

By tapping into the ample benefits and business insights social media offers, you can transform the way your entire company operates, and future-proof your brand.

11 ways social media affects your whole business

Here are 11 ways social media directly impacts businesses at every stage of the customer journey.

1. Improves customer care

Customer service on social media is a non-negotiable part of an omnichannel support strategy. Consumers tag and direct message brands to resolve their issues across platforms, and demand swift thoughtful responses in return. According to The Sprout Social Index™, nearly three-quarters of consumers expect a response on social within 24 hours—a consistent year-over-year finding for three years in a row.

A chart from The Sprout Social Index™ that found that most consumers search for new products and services on social media when they need to make a purchase within the next month.

Response rates have serious impacts on customer satisfaction, loyalty and retention. The Index also found that 76% of consumers value how quickly a brand can respond to their needs, while 70% expect a company to provide personalized responses.

Implementing a seamless support strategy enables you to increase the lifetime value of your existing customers and drive revenue growth. Well-orchestrated customer service efforts also deliver valuable insights about your customers’ experience that help your business evolve. Almost half (45%) of marketers said that by using social intelligence cross-functionally, they were able to improve customer retention through proactive engagement, according to The Social Intelligence Report.

But it can be hard for a customer support team to stay on top of multiple social platforms and data sources. By using an AI-powered solution like Social Customer Care by Sprout Social, it’s easier to coordinate across teams so you can tackle the most critical conversations first, and every customer feels heard, supported and valued. Sprout’s AI capabilities enable teams to move faster, such as enhancing responses and highlighting priority messages so your team can focus on the highest-impact interactions.

A user in the Sprout platform responding to a customer using AI Assist to generate a friendly response

You can also benchmark and track your support team’s performance to demonstrate their impact on revenue, identify opportunities for growth and capture customer feedback. The Case Management Report provides a holistic view of your team’s social care efforts, including key metrics like Case volume, handle and reply time, and performance benchmarks.

The Case Management Report in Sprout Social that demonstrates the volume of open cases, closed cases, reopened cased and change over time

2. Bolsters brand amplification

Almost one-quarter of marketers say underutilizing social insights resulted in losing market share to competitors, according to The Social Intelligence Report. Social media is where consumers go to discover new brands, which makes it a powerful channel for growing awareness.

Brand awareness is the first step toward generating new leads, edging out the competition and driving sales. Tactics like influencer marketing are especially effective, as influencers continue to wield considerable sway. According to The State of Influencer Marketing Report, 92% of marketers say, on average, the reach of sponsored influencer content outperforms organic content on their brand accounts. With the right influencers (and their loyal followers) on your side, you can amplify your brand significantly.

The Sprout Social Influencer Marketing platform finds creators who truly fit your brand, building audience trust. AI helps surface the most topically-relevant influencer matches, so campaigns feel genuine and resonate with your customers’ interests.

The Influencer Marketing interface, which demonstrates aspects of the creator's profile, including their brand safety score, a content analysis and an AI summary of their online presence.

Social media data also serves as a barometer of your current brand awareness, and helps you make business decisions that positively influence your reputation. For example, Sprout’s AI-driven Social Listening solution surfaces insights that reveal how you stack up to your competition via metrics like share of voice, positive sentiment, total engagements and overall conversation volume. These insights are a source of truth that can influence your company-wide competitive strategy, and enable you to make the right calls for your business by precisely decoding sentiment and competitive momentum.

Sprout Social’s Competitor Analysis Performance Report showing various metrics on various KPIs including topic summary, share of voice, total engagements and sentiment scores based on positive, negative and neutral emotions found in the data.

For more tips to distinguish yourself from your competitors on social media, check out our list of 12 proven strategies to increase brand awareness.

3. Maintains cultural relevance

Today’s trend cycle moves fast—fueled by Gen Z’s internet behavior—and social media is where trends are born. Social is the #1 place consumers use to keep up with cultural moments, and 93% agree it’s important for brands to keep up with online culture, according to The Index. From viral moments to emerging creators and niche communities, what happens on social media shapes so much of what we do, say and care about outside of social.

Today’s consumers can spot inauthenticity from a mile away. Whether it’s a perfectly timed meme or a meaningful response to a trending topic, staying in tune with social media culture ensures you’re not just talking at your audience, but thoughtfully interacting with them.

Trends aside, brands that retire or divest from their social media presence are also at risk of irrelevance and being abandoned by their audiences. Social media is the key to building a long-term brand strategy that will help you stay top of mind for years (and decades) to come.

In the face of fierce competition for consumer attention, it’s imperative to tune into conversations happening around your brand and industry. Social listening and predictive media intelligence enable you to tap into and analyze what people are saying about your company, even if you aren’t tagged or mentioned.

With our AI-powered Social Listening and NewsWhip by Sprout Social solutions, it’s possible to see what’s rising and why it matters, enabling teams across the org to act confidently to strengthen customer trust and engagement with your brand. NewsWhip, specifically, uses predictive monitoring to determine how big a breaking news story could become and who’s dominating the conversation across media publications and social. Using these two solutions together enables brands to stay on the pulse and get ahead.

The NewsWhip interface, including an AI-generated summary of media coverage, and graphs depicting media coverage and public interest trends.

4. Makes your products and services more discoverable

Most people’s primary instinct when looking for information is still to turn to traditional search engines—but Gen Z is the reason why this is shifting. Social is now the #1 place they search, more so than Google and traditional search engines, per the Q2 2025 Sprout Pulse Survey. And when they do use traditional search engines, social content is appearing in search results more often. YouTube has even become the top citation source for AI search.

Whether they’re looking for product reviews, restaurant recommendations or how-to tutorials, audiences increasingly want answers from real people (and often, in video form). Social networks deliver on both.

This growing inclination to treat social as the new search bar provides new opportunities for brands. For instance, consumers are most likely to say they want brands to publish educational content about products and services in 2026, according to the Q1 2026 Sprout Pulse Survey.

Chart showing the primary places Gen Z consumers turn to when searching for information, social media being first.

As social network algorithms continue to prioritize user interests over demographics like location, brands that optimize their content for discoverability have the best chance of reaching new audiences (and future buyers).

5. Drives revenue

Social media is ever-present in the sales funnel. From generating awareness through organic campaigns to supporting social commerce through influencer marketing, social plays a key role in acquiring and holding onto customers.

For example, 76% of all users say social media (ads, influencer posts, brand content, etc.) has influenced some percentage of their purchases over the past six months, according to the Q2 2025 Sprout Pulse Survey.

On the other hand, 56% of marketing leaders say social drives revenue, and a comparable amount use revenue metrics to quantify social ROI, per The 2025 Impact of Social Media Report. There’s an instinctual understanding that social drives more than brand awareness—and that awareness alone doesn’t generate ROI—but many teams don’t have the infrastructure to prove it.

Some metrics (like MQLs) simplify attribution and make it easy to define ROI. Others (like engagement) can correlate with revenue gains, but their direct influence is harder to prove.

To meet this challenge, about one-third of marketers say their organization plans to prioritize integrations to increase investment in social intelligence, per The Social Intelligence Report. Sprout is the AI-powered Social Intelligence platform that completes the business intelligence ecosystem.

While other tools measure the result of business decisions, Sprout captures the reasoning of the market, using AI to understand the “how” and “why” behind every data point. It does not replace your CRM or BI tools like Salesforce; it stands alongside them as the source of external market reality. By unifying these systems, the enterprise eliminates the critical gap between internal data and external truth.

A Tableau dashboard with data from Sprout Social incorporated.

Over the last few years, Sprout’s social team has reimagined our approach to measuring the revenue impact of our work. In partnership with marketing leadership and our analytics team, we moved to a multi-touch attribution model that allows us to track the impact of social, influencer marketing and advocacy on leads throughout the sales funnel. Thanks to diligent UTM tagging in Sprout and our Salesforce integration, we uncovered a 5,800% increase in additional pipeline impact.

6. Fosters a thriving brand community

Responding on social and engaging with individual users is even more important to building an authentic brand community than simply posting just to post. A brand community is a place for people with an emotional investment in your brand to connect with each other and your company. There are many people who already love your brand. In fact, your brand community probably already exists on social media—you just need to find it.

Establishing relationships with your existing and potential customers makes them feel valued, which increases brand loyalty and evangelism. By actively addressing your audience’s questions, reacting to their comments and capitalizing on surprise-and-delight moments, you nurture a group of superfans who spread positive word-of-mouth and even share user-generated content on your behalf. (That library of content showcasing your product or service in action is great for discoverability too.)

An Instagram post from Brooks and Harlem Run, a local run club of Brooks enthusiasts.

Brand communities on and off social media are especially powerful business tools because they allow companies to hear from and engage with their biggest advocates in real time. Within your community on social, you can easily test new product mockups, source requested features, share content and collect feedback that can improve every aspect of your business.

7. Helps get ahead of a brand crisis

Nearly 40% of social marketers say their greatest fear is having to navigate a brand crisis, according to the Index. As many businesses know all too well, even crises that start offline (product recalls, leadership issues, supply chain problems) can quickly migrate and amplify on social.

In these scenarios, savvy communications and marketing teams can use social to their advantage. With the right tools, brands can surface real-time insights from social and media outlets that signal a crisis is emerging before it spins out of control. For example, NewsWhip helps you stay ahead of the narrative and be ready to act when conversations shift, with predictive alerts tailored to the issues, keywords and competitors you care about.

The NewsWhip real-time alerts pop-up, showing key changes triggered by specific keywords.

But social also makes it easier for brands to address crises head-on with audiences, demonstrating authenticity in a way formal press releases cannot. Like when energy drink brand Celsius was involved in a labeling mishap with hard seltzer brand High Noon: rather than ignoring the debacle, Celsius leaned in, captioning a photo of their product “it’s happy hour” and joking about their products not containing alcohol on X. They also teamed up with influencer Madison Humphrey, a creator known for her skits about divorced parents, for a hyper-focused video making light of the snafu.

Instagram post from Celcius showcasing their products with the caption "Tag your friends...it's happy hour."

An X post from Celsuis that says "We're high energy, not ABV"

According to Sprout’s Influencer Marketing data, the brand posts received over 1.5 million views, and Humphrey’s post received over 50,000 engagements and delivered almost $100,000 in earned media value. Thanks to quick thinking and the right social-first flair, what could’ve been a brand disaster ended up boosting sentiment and awareness.

8. Encourages brand advocacy

Satisfied employees want to spread the word about their company by posting on social. With social budgets tightening, employee-generated content is your superpower for expanding your reach without straining your bandwidth or ad budget. It’s a win-win.

According to Sprout’s Employee Advocacy Report, posting company content helps employees accomplish their day-to-day tasks and long-term goals. Employees report that sharing on social can help outside audiences understand their brand’s values, provide new leads and ways to engage with them, expand their potential reach and engagement, and communicate important messages internally.

A graphic that reads: Ways employees believe sharing company posts on social media helps their role. The ways include: brand awareness, social selling, market amplification and internal communication. The chart compares engaged user responses (employees who spend average of 60 minutes or more on social media each day) and casual user responses (employees who spend less than 60 minutes a day on social media). Brand awareness and social selling are top reasons for engaged and casual users.

The Advocacy Report also revealed 72% of engaged social media users would post about their company if content was written for them. Sprout’s Employee Advocacy platform enables you to draft message ideas for your employees to share, which makes it easy for them to amplify your content and help you achieve your goals. When employees share authentic, on-brand stories from the platform, customers feel more informed and connected to your brand.

A screenshot of Sprout's Employee Advocacy platform that demonstrates how users can curate a new story for their internal team to share.

9. Maximizes recruitment

Prospective candidates rely on social media to find open positions and research companies. According to LinkedIn, over 10,000 members apply for jobs on the network every minute.

The staggering figure explains why building a strong employer brand with the help of social media is essential to attracting top talent. To stand out in a sea of employers, your content needs to showcase your unique culture and values, and encourage brand advocacy. For example, creating a meet the team social post series or day-in-the-life vignettes are both effective ways to humanize your brand and grow your candidate base.

A video posted to Sprout's Instagram channel showing the behind-the-scenes of a day in the life filming a customer case study

In addition to having your pick of the talent pool, featuring and celebrating your current employees will boost their satisfaction and reduce turnover, while generating audience engagement. According to a Q1 2026 Pulse Survey, almost 20% of consumers want to see frontline employees in brands’ social content more than any other content type.

10. Informs customer and competitor research

Most brands today run their business on incomplete data. They rely on surveys, focus groups and dashboards that reflect only a sliver of what customers actually think—while overlooking the conversations happening at scale on social.

Social is the richest, most honest source of customer insight today. It offers a real-time, unfiltered source of valuable consumer data to AI-powered intelligence platforms that require a steady diet of current data to remain useful.

Yet it’s still siloed, underused, and cut off from the systems where strategy is shaped and decisions are made. Marketing teams are most likely to use social data to inform their decisions today, according to The Social Intelligence Report. Product teams, which are responsible for shaping what a company builds, engage with social intelligence far less frequently. R&D teams, arguably the function that could benefit most from real-time, unprompted consumer feedback, use it even less.

When shared effectively, insights from social data can enrich an entire organization’s understanding of their customers and competition. Car manufacturer American Honda knows this first-hand: Social insights flow directly to R&D and marketing to shape sentiment around innovations like electric vehicles, showing how a well-defined social intelligence program can feed back into other departments and influence tangible business actions and products.

Surfacing these insights shouldn’t be like finding needles in a haystack. For example, as the Competitive Analysis Performance tab from Sprout’s Listening solution illustrates, AI analysis makes quick work of determining your competitive share of voice. You can take it further by asking Trellis, Sprout’s AI agent, questions to gain further insight into the data and make business decisions faster.

The Sprout Listening Competitive Analysis interface, where you can see a topic summary and share of voice comparing four competitors. The dashboard also compares engagements, impressions and positive sentiment, and has a pop-up option to chat with Trellis, the AI agent.

11. Refines product development

People are talking about your products on social media right now, whether they’re tagging you or not. They’re sharing what they love about them, and the exact ways they want you to improve them. And 55% of all social users say most companies do a good job of listening to what audiences say on social, but they don’t always act on that feedback, per a Q4 2025 Sprout Pulse Survey.

Building the right social listening queries can surface the feedback and prioritize product development needs. When you can turn feedback into meaningful insights and share them with your product and development team, you make your audience feel seen and build brand advocates for life. For example, with the help of Sprout, Canva tags all messages from users sharing product feedback or recommending wishlist features. This makes it easier to close the loop later when new releases come out—which happens frequently, since their recent product announcements have been based on user feedback.

A TikTok carousel from Canva showcasing how to use their Background Eraser Tool, a highly-requested tool, to create engaging effects and optical illusions

Building long-term partnerships with influencers can also enrich R&D. According to The State of Influencer Marketing Report, 62% of all consumers who make daily or weekly purchases based on influencer recommendations are likely to share product feedback directly with influencers. The influencers you partner with have an even more direct view into your customers’ sentiment and feedback—insights that can help your brand pivot in real-time and grow long-term.

How social media impacts different business types

While social media positively impacts all business types, there are a few distinct benefits for companies of different sizes and industries.

SMB

For small and medium businesses, social media is an accessible way to access a wide audience and should be an essential part of your marketing playbook. Even with a small social team (or maybe even a team of one), you can design, execute and manage a presence that reaches and engages your target audience.

Read more: How Orkney Library uses social media to grow a global fanbase.

Enterprise

For enterprise brands, social is business critical. Through social intelligence, you have access to valuable, global customer data that can be turned into a business advantage. Plus, social data makes it easier to measure and attribute the success of campaigns at scale, which can have a large impact on an organization’s big picture. In fact, 82% of enterprise marketers say their social strategy impacts their business’ bottom line, and 85% say social enables them to create new products and services.

Read more: How ScottsMiracle-Gro empowers agents and cultivates brand loyalty with Sprout’s Salesforce Service Cloud integration.

B2C

B2C brands depend on social to increase their discoverability and create customers for life. By leveraging influencer marketing and developing communities of loyal fans, B2C companies tap into the power of social proof. Authentic engagement builds audience trust, driving long-term growth and brand affinity.

Read more: How Casey’s improved their overall guest satisfaction score with Sprout’s customer care capabilities.

B2B

When B2B brands harness social media, they significantly boost their market presence—making it easier to drive steady revenue growth. Like B2C, B2B companies rely on brand advocacy (from their employees, customers and community) to increase share of voice and visibility.

Read more: How Salesforce saved 12,000 hours and increased community engagement efficiency tenfold with Sprout.

Nonprofit

For nonprofit organizations, social is a prime channel for securing donations, increasing awareness of their mission, influencing public discourse and providing a community for those advocating for their cause. Unlike traditional media, social offers a direct line to the public, making it easier to encourage time-sensitive action and shape the narrative.

Read more: How the Innocence Project uses social to save lives.

Healthcare

Social media offers a variety of advantages for the healthcare industry—from combating misinformation and delivering faster customer service to supporting employer brand efforts. Savvy organizations are even collaborating with brand-safe influencers to deliver health education on the networks patients already spend time on.

Read more: How Penn State Health amplifies the voice of the patient on social.

How will social media impact your business this year?

The future is bright for companies that recognize the power of social intelligence. Make the most of the business intel gleaned from social by bringing social data to the forefront of your business conversations and acting on them.

For more into how leading teams turn social insight into action, download The 2026 Social Intelligence Report.

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What is an AI form builder (and how does it actually work)?

What is an AI form builder (and how does it actually work)

An AI form builder is a tool that creates signup forms from plain-language descriptions instead of manual design. You describe the form you want in a sentence, and the builder generates it. No coding. No dragging elements around a canvas. No hiring a designer. The result is a working, publishable form built in seconds from a text prompt, a screenshot, or a guided template.

This is a different approach than traditional form builders. Instead of choosing a template and editing fields one at a time, you tell the AI what you need, and it handles the layout, styling, animation, and field mapping.

GIF showing a signup form generated from clicking a camera

The AI Signup Form Builder from AWeber is one example of this approach. It creates animated popups, floating 3D buttons, scratch-card reveals, spin-the-wheel signups, and multi-step forms from a single prompt. But the concept extends beyond any one tool.

Here is what AI form builders do, how they work, and what separates a useful one from a gimmick.

How does an AI form builder work?

AI form builders use large language models to interpret what you describe and generate a working form from that description. The process works in three stages.

1. You provide an input. That input can be a written description ("Create a popup with a countdown timer and email field"), a screenshot of a form you saw on another site, or selections from a guided prompt that walks you through options like form type, fields, and behavior.

Screenshot of the free style prompt field in AWeber for the AI signup form builder

2. The AI interprets your input and generates the form. It handles layout, colors, animations, field types, and display logic. A good AI form builder does not just produce static HTML. It builds interactive elements like scroll triggers, entrance animations, and conditional display rules.

3. You refine through conversation. Instead of clicking through menus, you describe changes in plain language. "Make the button larger." "Change the background to dark blue." "Add a progress bar." The AI updates the form and you preview the result.

This loop of describe, generate, and refine replaces the traditional build process where you would drag elements onto a canvas, configure each one individually, and troubleshoot layout issues across devices.

What makes AI form builders different from traditional form builders?

Traditional form builders are manual. You pick a template, drag fields into position, adjust spacing, choose colors, set display rules, and preview across devices. Every design decision requires a separate action. Multi-step forms, animations, and gamified elements either require custom code or are not available at all.

AI form builders collapse that process. You describe the outcome, and the tool builds it.

That difference hits hardest for small businesses. According to AWeber's research, 43% of small businesses have 500 or fewer email subscribers. Many of those businesses know they need a signup form. The thing that stops them is not cost. It is the blank canvas. They open a form builder, see a wall of options, and either pick the first template that looks acceptable or close the tab entirely.

An AI form builder removes that starting friction. You type what you want. You get a working form back. If it is not right, you describe the change instead of hunting for the right setting.

What should you look for in an AI form builder?

Not every AI form builder works the same way. Some generate basic static forms. Others produce interactive, animated forms with advanced display logic. Here is what separates a capable AI form builder from one that just automates a template picker.

Multiple input methods. The best AI form builders give you more than one way to start. Free prompting lets you describe your form in your own words. Guided prompts walk you through structured choices when you are not sure where to begin. Screenshot upload lets you recreate a form you saw somewhere else with your own branding. A template gallery gives you a starting point to customize through conversation.

Conversational refinement. Generating the initial form is step one. The real value is in the revision loop. You should be able to describe changes in natural language and see the form update. Upload images mid-conversation for visual inspiration. Come back later and pick up where you left off with full context.

Interactive and animated elements. Static forms blend into the page. A strong AI form builder creates forms that earn attention: animated popups with custom scroll triggers, floating buttons with hover effects, scratch-card reveals, countdown timers, spin-the-wheel mechanics, and multi-step layouts with progress bars. These are the kinds of forms that used to require a developer.

Custom field mapping. When your form collects information beyond name and email, like favorite product, company name, or location, the builder should map that data to the correct field in your email platform automatically. If the field does not exist, it should create one.

Display and targeting controls. A form is only effective if the right people see it at the right time. Look for page-level targeting, device targeting (mobile, desktop, or both), frequency controls (every visit, once per visitor, once per session), and scheduling (start and end dates so seasonal promotions turn on and off automatically).

Preview before publish. You need to see exactly how the form will look and behave before it goes live. That means testing animations, field validation, entrance triggers, and thank-you page behavior in a real preview environment.

How AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder works

Getting started

The AI Signup Form Builder from AWeber gives you four ways to create a form.

Free prompting. Open the builder and describe what you want. "Create a scratch-card signup form where visitors scratch off to reveal a hidden discount. Always reveal 15% off." The builder generates the form with the scratch mechanic, the prize logic, and the email capture built in. Quick tips help you write a stronger prompt if you are not sure how to start.

Guided prompts. A structured prompt walks you through it: what you want people to sign up for, what type of form you want (popup, slide-in, floating button, horizontal bar), what fields to collect, and what behavior to add (urgency timer, animation, gamification). Fill in the blanks and the builder creates the form.

GIF showing AWeber's guided prompt for AI signup form builder

Screenshot upload. See a form on another site that you like? Upload a screenshot. Tell the builder what to keep and what to change. It adapts the design as your starting point with your own branding applied.

Template gallery. Browse ready-to-use forms organized by type: popups, slide-ins, horizontal bars. Pick one and customize through conversation.

GIF showing different AI signup form templates in AWeber

Making edits

Once your form exists, a chat interface handles every revision. Describe any change and the builder makes it. You can also click directly on any text or button element to move, copy, or edit it. Upload images mid-conversation for visual inspiration. Close the tab and come back later. The builder picks up with full context on your current form.

Publishing

When you are ready to publish, display settings let you control where the form appears. Choose specific pages or show it site-wide. Set frequency to every visit, once per visitor, once per session, or on a schedule. Target by device. Set a start or end date for seasonal promotions. The on/off switch enables or disables any form instantly, no site code changes needed.

Custom field mapping

Custom fields map automatically. When your form collects information like favorite color or company name, the builder matches it to the right custom field in your AWeber account. No matching field? It creates one at publish.

Previewing and testing

Preview mode shows appearance, animations, field validation, and thank-you page behavior before anything goes live. Reload the preview to replay animations from the start.

What kinds of forms can AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder create?

The range depends on the tool, but a capable AI form builder handles far more than basic email capture. Here are examples of what AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder generates from a single prompt.

Animated popups. Popups that slide, bounce, or fade into view instead of just appearing. Set the scroll trigger, entrance animation, and timing in one prompt. Try: "Make a popup that slides up from the bottom of the screen with a bounce effect when a visitor scrolls past 50% of the page."

Floating 3D buttons. Buttons and elements that lift off the form with a 3D shadow effect and hover animation. The depth pulls attention to the subscribe action without competing with your page content.

Scratch-card reveals. Visitors use their mouse or finger to scratch off a hidden area and reveal a discount or offer. The mechanic, prize logic, and email capture are all built in. Try: "Create a scratch-card signup form where visitors scratch off to reveal a hidden discount. Always reveal 15% off."

Form using scratch off to reveal discount

Spin-the-wheel signups. Visitors enter their email for a chance to win a discount. The builder generates the wheel, the prize logic, and the email capture in one prompt.

Multi-step forms with progress bars. Break longer forms into steps so visitors see progress as they go. The builder handles step logic, progress indicators, and field validation.

Countdown timer forms. Add urgency with a live countdown. The timer, form fields, and display logic are generated together.

Each of these form types would traditionally require a developer or designer, custom CSS, and JavaScript. An AI form builder creates them from a description.

How to get started with AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder

The AI Signup Form Builder is available now in open beta. Log in to your AWeber account, open the form builder, and describe your first form.

If you do not have an AWeber account, the free plan supports up to 500 subscribers and includes full access to AI Signup Form Builder.


Frequently asked questions about AI form builders

Can an AI form builder create multi-step forms?

Yes. A capable AI form builder like AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder creates multi-step forms with progress bars from a single description. You describe what information to collect at each step, and the builder generates the step logic, progress indicators, and field validation. This is a significant advantage over traditional multi-step form builders, which typically require you to configure each step, transition, and validation rule separately.

Is the AI Signup Form Builder from AWeber free?

The AI Signup Form Builder is included with all AWeber plans, including the free plan that supports up to 500 subscribers. The builder is currently in open beta, meaning all AWeber users can access it and create AI-generated signup forms at no additional cost.

Do I need coding skills to use an AI form builder?

No. The entire point of an AI form builder is that you describe what you want in plain language instead of writing code. The AI Signup Form Builder from AWeber offers four ways to start that require zero technical knowledge: free prompting (describe in your own words), guided prompts (fill-in-the-blank structured options), screenshot upload (recreate a form you saw elsewhere), and a template gallery (pick a starting point and customize through conversation).



The post What is an AI form builder (and how does it actually work)? appeared first on AWeber.



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Any Form You Can Imagine, AI Signup Form Builder Can Create it

Any Form You Can Imagine, AI Signup Form Builder Can Create it

Animated popups with custom triggers. Floating 3D buttons with hover effects. Scratch-card reveals. Gamified experiences. Multi-step forms with progress bars. These kind of forms used to require a developer or designer. Now with AWeber’s AI Signup Form Builder, you can have it by describing what you want in a single sentence.

Easy to get started

Every option is designed to give you a working form in just seconds.

Free prompting

Describe your form in your own words. Quick tips help you write a stronger prompt.

Screenshot of the free style prompt field in AWeber for the AI signup form builder

Guided prompts

Suggested prompt guides you through building a form that converts.

GIF showing AWeber's guided prompt for AI signup form builder

Design from a screenshot

Upload a screenshot of any form you like. Tell the builder what to keep, and it adapts the design as your starting point.

Template gallery

Start with ready-to-use forms.

AWeber's AI Signup Form Builder Templates

Refine through chat, click to edit

A chat interface handles revisions once the form exists. Describe the change and the assistant does it.

You can also click directly on any text or button to move, copy, or delete it.

Upload images mid-conversation for visual inspiration.

Come back later and the builder picks up with full context on your current form.

Control who sees your forms

1. Page options show your form on all pages or select specific ones.
2. Frequency set visibility to every visitor, once per visitor, once per session, or on a select schedule.
3. Schedule a start or end date so your form turns on and off automatically.
4. Device show your form to all visitors, mobile only, or desktop only.

Preview mode shows appearance, animations, field validation, and thank-you page behavior before you go live. Reload the preview to replay animations from the start.

Maps automatically to custom fields

When your form collects info like favorite color or company name, the builder maps it to the right custom field in your account. No matching field? It creates one at publish.

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Monday, 18 May 2026

How social intelligence unlocks intelligent customer care

Customer care is one of the most important aspects of social media management. Social and care teams are the frontline employees receiving customer feedback in real time, and solving or escalating issues before it evolves into something more serious. According to The 2025 Sprout Social Index™, 73% of social users agree that if a brand doesn’t respond to them on social, they’ll buy from a competitor.

That attitude has been the case for several years, but in an age of instant response through AI and direct access on social, customer expectations are even greater. And teams need to evolve their strategies to keep up, being proactive rather than reactive.

Gathering and acting on social data can enable customer care teams to identify potential issues before they escalate or bubble up into full-blown crises. Instead of waiting for a customer to reach their breaking point, companies can detect subtle shifts in sentiment and emerging patterns in conversations in real time.

And when you integrate AI it acts as the ultimate force multiplier. AI enables you to crunch large volumes of unstructured data, aggregating customer feedback into actionable insights with a speed and accuracy that was previously impossible. When care teams can tap the world’s largest focus groups, they can skate to where the puck is going rather than just reacting to individual inquiries. It’s a transformation into intelligent customer care, and at the heart of this approach is social intelligence.

What is intelligent customer care?

Intelligent customer care utilizes social intelligence and AI to prioritize responses, summarize conversation and proactively addresses customer concerns. This enables your team to provide personalized care that hits the right note with every customer. By understanding the context behind the query, you can transform a standard service interaction into something meaningful for the customer that builds genuine loyalty and fuels long-term growth.

Using social intelligence—the practice of gathering and acting on social data—in your customer care strategy allows for a two-pronged approach:

  • Micro-level prevention that solves problems for specific users before they feel the need to escalate.
  • Macro-level optimization that identifies and flags systemic flaws to implement broad changes that eliminate the root cause of complaints.

According to the Social Intelligence Report, customer care is the most cited success story for utilizing social data outside of marketing. In fact, 45% of professionals reported that social data had a positive impact on customer care through the discovery of emerging trends and untapped customer needs. This leads to better problem resolution, and surprise and delight moments that improve sentiment and coverage.

Social intelligence moves beyond direct mentions and private messages to understand the broader ecosystem with unfiltered feedback about your brand, industry and competitors that would otherwise go unseen. This helps your team stop playing defense and start leading with proactive action and engagement. And by monitoring the total volume and sentiment of conversations, you can catch subtle shifts before they turn into a full inbox of complaints that take up the support team’s time.

In this new era, the best response is the one you never had to send. And success is measured by the complaints you prevented, not just how fast you answered them.

So, how do you actually put intelligent customer care into practice?

Implementing social intelligence as an early warning system

Social data is the most real-time source of information that any organization has, and you can use that speed to your advantage. By leveraging it as an early warning system, you can detect subtle patterns in customer complaints or feedback and act to course correct before it becomes a larger issue.

These signals often point toward larger systemic issues such as a localized service outage, a bug in a recent software update or a confusing new policy that indicates broader sentiment shifts. Once identified, this intelligence can be fed back into the larger business ecosystem to course-correct before a minor friction point transforms into a widespread crisis.

To act on these audience insights, organizations must establish clear internal pathways, creating direct lines of communication so that early warnings from social channels are immediately shared with relevant departments, whether that’s customer success, product or PR.

With the right customer service tools, you can ensure that teams with the power to fix the root cause are alerted the moment the data signals a problem, allowing them to mitigate the issues quickly.

Trends don’t always knock, sometimes they break down the door. So you want to hear them coming before that happens. Social Customer Care by Sprout Social does this with Message Spike Alerts in our Smart Inbox, which turn your social messages into a warning system, so your team can get ahead of the problem early. And Listening Spike Alerts in Sprout Listening give your team early warnings when conversations change, so you’re never the last to know when the landscape shifts.

The moment your social conversations and messages break from the historical baseline, you’ll get an alert. No manual digging required. You can set your system to trigger when it detects:

  • Volume: A sudden, unexplained peak in the noise level.
  • Engagement: An unusual spike in shares or comments on a single thread.
  • Sentiment: A sharp, real-time shift in the mood of the conversation.

By automating this layer of care, you move your team past the grind of manual monitoring and towards solving problems before anyone else knows they exist.

Use sentiment analysis to prioritize responses

Not every message carries the same weight. Sentiment analysis allows your team to look beyond the literal text and decode the emotion and motivation behind it. A frustrated customer requires a different level of warmth and urgency than one who is simply asking a logistical question. By flagging high-frustration signals, you can move these interactions to the front of the queue and extinguish the spark before it catches fire.

Being aware of the sentiment also enables you to tailor the tone in your response to what’s most appropriate.

And while it’s vital for risk mitigation, it’s equally powerful for growth. By filtering for high-praise, high-influence voices, you can spot the unique opportunities to build brand equity. Engaging meaningfully with happy customers turns them into advocates, builds social proof and strengthens your brand.

Proactive engagement that’s in-tune with customer sentiment transforms your social presence into a vibrant, living community that amplifies your brand’s message, carrying it further than you ever could alone.

Break internal silos to scale the omnichannel experience

To get the most value out of intelligent customer service, the insights gathered by social and care teams cannot exist in a vacuum. To scale empathy, you need to see the whole person, not just the profile. This ensures that every department, from marketing to product development, is aligned with the customer’s actual experience, and can react accordingly.

The first step in breaking silos is technical integration. The Sprout Social Salesforce integration enables you to merge your CRM data with social media, so you can leverage social intelligence to enrich customer profiles. When a rep can see past purchases, previous support tickets and loyalty status alongside a current social interaction, the game changes. It means they can provide a seamless level of personalized service that meets the customer where they are right now.

A screenshot showing the Sprout Salesforce integration

Efficiency also improves when the voice of the customer flows through existing business tools. You can empower your teams to:

  • Generate CRM data or support cases directly from a social message.
  • Ensure that critical feedback doesn’t get lost in a DM but instead moves directly from the social front lines to the support desk.

By providing broader access to these insights, intelligent customer care enriched by social data serves as a compass for the entire company. Don’t wait for other departments to ask for data, make sure they see it.

Strategy Tip: Schedule recurring cross-functional reports to be delivered automatically to product and sales leaders.

By ensuring that real-time customer care feedback informs the product roadmap and sales strategy, your business stays agile and customer-centric. If the product team sees a recurring frustration in the data, they can fix it at the source and prevent the issue from arising again.

Deploy AI to respond early and confidently

AI is the elephant in the room for tech. But the goal of integrating AI customer service into your social and customer care strategy is to protect the human element, not remove it.

You should view AI as a high-speed assistant rather than a replacement for your customer care agents. It excels at handling repetitive data processing and categorization, which frees up your human experts to focus on complex problem solving and high-empathy interactions.

As a company scales, maintaining consistency becomes a major challenge. AI also acts as a quality control layer, ensuring that your unified brand voice remains intact across thousands of interactions. Whether a customer is speaking to a veteran agent or a new hire, intelligent tools can suggest language and tone that align with your brand’s identity, ensuring a high-quality, predictable experience every time.

Entering the intelligent customer care era

Integrating social intelligence with customer care is a total reimagining of what a digital presence can do. We are leaving the era of just reacting to messages. We’ve entered the era of intelligent customer care, which means meeting your customers’ needs before a specific issue even causes them to raise a ticket or concern publicly.

For too long, social customer service was treated like a cost center, an overhead expense to be minimized. Intelligent customer care flips that on its head. When you prove that proactive care reduces churn or boosts the brand, social customer care becomes a growth engine that clearly belongs at the leadership table.

Scaling doesn’t have to mean an endless increase in headcount. The intelligent customer service era thrives on a hybrid approach of strategic automation and human judgment, where each plays a crucial role.

By leveraging both, you set new standards. Bringing social intelligence to customer care means your team can stop managing volume and start mastering the customer experience.

To start making your customer care strategy more intelligent, learn how the Sprout Social Salesforce integration can strengthen your whole team with social intelligence.

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Friday, 15 May 2026

How to post on Instagram: A step‑by‑step guide for feed, Stories and reels

Your phone buzzes with a new comment on the Reel you posted. A quick scroll shows fresh likes, shares and a bump in followers. That’s the power of an Instagram post done right.

But building visibility, sparking engagement and nudging people closer to becoming customers takes creativity, planning and timing. Brands with a strong Instagram marketing strategy and consistent publishing see the best results.

This guide walks you through how to post every Instagram format—photos, videos, Stories and Reels—with practical tips on captions, timing and the tools that make the whole process faster.

Managing Instagram shouldn't mean juggling five apps

Managing Instagram shouldn’t mean juggling five apps. Sprout Social’s Essentials plan puts publishing, scheduling and reporting in one workspace, so you spend less time on logistics and more on content that converts. Try it free for 30 days—no credit card required.

How to post photos and videos on Instagram’s mobile app

Most people post to Instagram directly from their iPhone or Android. The process is simple, but small details like aspect ratio, captions and hashtags make the difference between a post people scroll past and one they engage with.

You can also post on Instagram from a PC or Mac, but the walkthrough below focuses on the steps and advanced settings for posting photos and videos from mobile.

Choose your media type

Open the Instagram app and tap the “+” icon at the top left of the page to add one of the following:

  • A single photo: Upload one image to highlight a product or share important information. Single photos are ideal for quick updates and clean visuals.
  • A carousel: Share up to 20 images or videos in one post (rolling out; some users may still have a 10-item limit). Carousels work well for tutorials, step-by-step guides and before-and-after reveals. They also tend to drive higher engagement than single-image posts.
  • A reel: Use videos to add motion and storytelling to your feed. Short clips match how people watch on mobile, which makes them ideal for product demos, how-tos or customer stories.
UI of Instagram on the mobile app, showing the

Instagram offers clear guidelines for every format. Here are the Instagram file specifications to consider when uploading:

  • Photos: JPG/JPEG or PNG files with a minimum width of 1080 px
  • Videos: MP4 or MOV files with a minimum width of 1080 px
  • Feed post aspect ratios: Between 1.91:1 and 3:4
  • Reels: Vertical 9:16 videos are recommended for the best viewing experience
  • Reels cover photos: Covers are displayed at different crops across the app, recommended size for cover photos is 420px by 654px (or 1:1.55 ratio)
  • Square (1:1) and vertical formats typically perform best in mobile feeds

Preparing posts using Instagram’s recommended specifications can help reduce cropping and formatting issues after upload.

Edit and crop

Once you select your media, the next step is making sure it looks its best in the feed. Instagram’s built-in editor lets you crop images, adjust brightness, sharpen details or trim clips. You can also add music, filters, text and overlays.

Three screenshots of Instagram's UI that display the editing stage of the upload process of a photo onto Instagram

This stage matters because how your content appears in the feed directly affects engagement.

Here are some common aspect ratios:

  • Landscape feed posts: 1.91:1
  • Square feed posts: 1:1
  • Vertical feed posts: 4:5
  • Reels: 9:16 recommended vertical format
  • Stories: 9:16 vertical format or between 4:5 and 1.91:1

Because vertical images tend to stand out, some brands build their entire aesthetic around them. For example, fashion brand Damson Madder leans on 4:5 across its grid. Consistent vertical framing creates a cohesive look and maximizes visibility in the scroll. Even playful images, like styled socks or outdoor lifestyle shots, feel bold and attention-grabbing because they fill the feed.

Screenshot of Damson Madder’s Instagram feed using vertical 4:5 images for a cohesive grid layout

Source: Instagram

But editing isn’t just about filters and crops. It’s also about consistency. Brands with a clear, recognizable visual identity build stronger recall.

For instance, LoveShackFancy’s posts consistently feature soft lighting, pastel tones and airy compositions, creating a vintage-inspired look that feels cohesive across images, carousels and videos.

Screenshot of LoveShackFancy’s Instagram feed featuring pastel colors and soft lighting

Source: Instagram

The effect is unmistakable: Followers recognize LoveShackFancy posts instantly, even before checking the username. That level of consistency boosts both brand identity and engagement.

However, if you’re managing a social team, maintaining a cohesive look can be complicated. Different people might not crop or filter images the same way and approving edits across channels takes time. A centralized workflow simplifies this process.

Streamline your workflow with Essentials

With Sprout Socials’s Compose editor included on every plan, starting with Essentials —you can crop content to the right dimensions, apply edits and draft posts in one place before they go live. Instead of bouncing between editing apps and separate scheduling tools, your team can prepare and publish from a single workspace.

 

UI of Sprout Social's compose box showing a draft of an Instagram post that is importing images directly from Canva

 

And publishing is just the start. Essentials also includes Optimal Send Times to automatically post when your audience is most active, SproutLink to turn your Instagram bio into a traffic-driving landing page, and auto-first-comment scheduling to boost reach without cluttering your captions. It’s everything a growing team needs to plan, publish and perform from a single platform.

Ready to simplify your Instagram workflow? Start your free 30-day trial of Sprout Social.

Start a 30-day free trial

Write captions, hashtags and tags that boost reach

Imagine posting a photo of your new fall collection with the caption, “New arrivals are here.” It gets a few likes, then disappears in the scroll. But if you change it to, “Pumpkin spice isn’t just for lattes. Meet our fall knit, made to keep you cozy all season. Tap the link in bio to shop 🍂” Add Instagram hashtags like #FallStyle and #CozyKnits and you may see your reach extend beyond your followers.

Captions and hashtags can turn a good visual into a post that sparks real engagement. Here’s how to make them work harder:

  • Lead with a hook in captions: Instagram allows captions up to 2,054 characters (at time of writing; the limit may vary), but only the first 125 show in the feed before users have to tap “…more.” Since short, direct captions often outperform longer ones, grab attention early by opening with the detail that matters most. Concise, hook-first captions continue to outperform longer blocks of text, especially on carousel posts where users are already interacting with multiple frames.
  • Use hashtags strategically: To increase visibility beyond your followers, aim for three to five relevant, popular hashtags for your post. Try mixing broad tags (#FallStyle) with niche or timely ones (#NYCFashionWeek) to balance discovery and relevance. Just don’t forget to refresh your list often so you’re not recycling the same set.
  • Tag people, brands and locations: Every tag adds another discovery path. For example, a restaurant that tags its chef and a featured farmer—and takes the time to hit “add location”—increases its chances of showing up in new audiences’ feeds.

Not all hashtags drive the same results. Some are better for boosting impressions, while others fuel more meaningful actions like profile clicks, saves or shares. To see what’s actually working, review your post-level performance data.

Want to see which hashtags are actually driving results? Sprout’s post-level performance reports—available on the Essentials plan—let you track impressions, engagement and profile clicks for every post so you can double down on what’s working.

How to post Stories on Instagram

Stories sit at the top of the app and disappear after 24 hours (unless you add it as a highlight). Compared to feed posts, they appear more casual and are more effective for real-time sharing. These attributes make them a powerful tool for community building.

Smaller accounts in particular see strong results from Stories. Stories remain an effective format for community building because they encourage quick, casual interactions and give brands more opportunities to engage audiences in real time.

Here’s how to post Stories on Instagram:

Select media and design your Story

To create a Story, open Instagram, tap the “+” icon and select “Story” from the bottom of the page. From there, hold the shutter button to record a video or tap it once to take a photo. If you already have content saved, swipe up (or tap the gallery icon in the bottom left) to upload it from your phone’s camera roll.

Once you upload your Instagram Story, you’ll get access to the following creative tools to invite participation:

  • Polls to gauge audience opinions
  • Questions to spark conversation
  • GIFs and stickers to add personality
  • Music to set the mood

Brands often use these features to turn a passive view into an active interaction.

UI of Instagram where the user is in the editing stage of posting an Instagram Story

This simple interaction makes the Story more engaging and gives the brand instant feedback.

And with Sprout’s Compose editor and content calendar, you can plan and preview Stories before publishing to eliminate last-minute edits and guesswork.

Make your Stories accessible

Stories reach wider audiences when they’re accessible by giving people different ways to engage. For example, many users scroll Stories in public with sound off and others rely on screen readers to interpret visuals.

Here are some tips for making Instagram Stories more accessible:

  • Add captions to all videos so the message is clear, even without audio.
  • Write alt text for images so screen readers can describe them.
  • Stick to the right file specs to avoid awkward cropping or cut-off text. Stories should be vertical, with a 9:16 aspect ratio (1080 by 1920 pixels).

Publish and highlight your Stories

Once your Story is ready, tap the arrow to share it directly.

Stories automatically disappear after 24 hours, but you can save your best ones in highlights (found under your profile bio). Brands often group highlights by themes like “New Arrivals,” “Events” or “FAQs.”

For individual users, posting is simple. But when teams are involved, with different people creating, editing and publishing Stories, the risk of mistakes increases. For solo marketers, Sprout’s Compose editor and content calendar keep your Stories organized and on-brand.

How to post reels on Instagram

Instagram reels can now be up to 20 minutes long and Sensor Tower reported that Reels accounted for 46% of time spent on Instagram in the U.S. in 2025. But they are known for being used as a form of short-form content, designed to grab attention with music, effects and quick edits. For reels 3 minutes or shorter, they also will show up in the Explore and Reels tabs, giving you more ways to reach people who don’t follow you yet. Unlike Stories, reels remain on your profile instead of disappearing after 24 hours.

Here are step-by-step instructions to help you post reels on Instagram:

Choose your clips and design your reel

Open Instagram, tap the “+” icon, then select “Reel.” From here, you can either record video in the app by holding the shutter button or upload existing clips from your phone’s gallery.

After you choose your footage, Instagram gives you a full set of editing tools to shape the final piece. You can trim and reorder clips to control pacing or merge multiple shots into one seamless video. For audio, you can add trending sounds from Instagram’s library, include your own original audio tracks or create original voiceovers.

Screenshot showing Instagram Reels editor with tools to trim clips, add text, stickers, audio, overlays and captions

Source: Instagram

Once your basic edit is in place, you can layer on effects, stickers or text overlays to emphasize important details or clarify anything that might not be obvious from the visuals alone. When everything’s ready, select a cover image to represent your Reel in your grid. A clear, well-framed cover will make your profile look organized and encourage more people to tap and watch.

Create engaging captions and hashtags

Even the best video needs context. Strong captions help highlight key takeaways and guide viewers toward the next step, whether that’s saving the reel, sharing it or tapping the link in your bio.

Once your caption is set, consider discoverability. As with image posts, hashtags expand your reach beyond followers, so pair broad tags with niche ones that are relevant to your reel’s content. You can only use up to five hashtags on a post, so choose which ones are most strategic to reach your target audience for that piece of content.

For a bit of inspiration, check out the captions your competitors use or try AI writing tools to help draft caption ideas tailored to your tone and audience. If you’re on the Essentials plan, you can still schedule your first comment with a block of hashtags directly from Compose — a simple way to boost discoverability without cluttering your caption.

Sprout Social publishing tool showing you can schedule a new post and your first comment on said post at the same time

Not to mention, Sprout’s AI Assist, available on Professional plans and above, can generate caption or hashtag options tailored to your tone and brand fit.

Screenshot showing Sprout’s AI Assist suggesting Instagram post caption based on draft text

Choose the best time to publish

Timing also matters. If you publish when your audience is inactive, the feed can bury your Reel before it has a chance to gain traction. Posting during peak activity windows increases the odds that Instagram’s algorithm will push your video further, giving it more reach in Explore and beyond.

Rather than guessing the best time to post on Instagram, use social media tools with features like “Optimal Send Times” to analyze when your followers are most likely to engage. With Sprout Social, you can drop posts into the Sprout Queue and let the platform auto-publish at optimized times without manually picking timestamps.

Both Optimal Send Times and Sprout Queue are included on Sprout’s Essentials plan, so you don’t need a premium subscription to publish smarter.

Screenshot showing Sprout’s post scheduler with suggested optimal times to publish posts

How to boost your engagement and reach on Instagram with Sprout Social

If you’re still publishing straight from Instagram or Meta’s native tools, you’re likely leaving reach, consistency and growth on the table.

To centralize publishing, scheduling and reporting into one place, it’s best to leverage an intuitive social media management platform like Sprout Social. With everything in a single workspace, you can post at the right times, maintain a consistent feed and measure what’s working without juggling different apps.

Sprout Essentials

If you’re a solo marketer or small business owner, Sprout’s Essentials plan is built for you. For $79/month, you get publishing across up to 5 social profiles, Optimal Send Times, a visual content calendar, post performance reports and Sprout Queue—everything covered in this guide, in one workspace. No feature bloat, no paying for tools you won’t use.

 

Here are some ways Sprout Social helps you boost your engagement and reach on Instagram:

1. Post when your audience is most likely to engage

Instagram’s algorithm prioritizes recency, so publishing when your audience is online gives you a better chance at surfacing in their feeds.

The challenge is knowing exactly when that window is. Sprout’s Optimal Send Times analyzes up to 16 weeks of your engagement data and recommends time slots when your followers are most active.

2. Publish Instagram-native formats

Instagram rewards brands that lean into its various formats (reels, carousels and Stories) because they keep users engaged.

For brands posting at scale, managing all of these formats can be tricky. Scheduling tools like Sprout make it easier by letting you plan reels (with cover images and captions), carousels (up to 10 images or videos) and standard posts in advance. You can also plan Stories on desktop, then publish via mobile notification at the right moment. This approach streamlines your workflows into one place while respecting Instagram’s API rules.

3. Curate a feed that looks intentional

Your grid isn’t just a collection of posts, it’s your digital storefront. According to the 2025 Sprout Social Index, 65% of consumers say they’re more likely to interact with brands that maintain a strong, consistent presence on social media, highlighting the importance of posting high-quality content regularly.

To maximize the impact of your content, use Sprout’s content calendar to visualize your publishing cadence and ensure your seasonal campaigns don’t clash with evergreen content.

A screenshot of the Sprout Publishing dashboard showing Suggestions by AI Assist and a highlighted option to create three posts from text.

According to Sprout research, 65% of consumers say they’re more likely to interact with brands that maintain a strong, consistent presence on social media.

4. Nail the hashtag and first-comment strategy

Hashtags are still one of the simplest ways to boost discoverability beyond your existing followers. They can help your content surface in searches, show up on explore pages and join trending conversations. But managing hashtags well, including deciding which ones to use and avoiding repetition, can be a challenge.

Scheduling tools simplify this process. In Sprout, for example, you can schedule the first comment, which is especially useful for dropping in a block of hashtags without cluttering your caption. You can also reuse saved snippets directly in Compose, making it easier to apply hashtags systematically instead of recreating them for each post.

5. Prove what’s working and double down

Gut feelings aren’t a strategy, meaning you need data to guide decisions. Recent research backs this up. Rival IQ’s 2025 Benchmark Report show Reels and carousel posts consistently generating some of the strongest engagement rates across industries compared to standard video and static image posts.

To make data-backed decisions to inform your Instagram content strategy with confidence, you need visibility into your own performance. Sprout’s group, profile and post-level reports—included on every plan—let you track what’s driving results.

Sprout Social Post Performance Report UI, showing IG posts

Turn your Instagram strategy into impact

Posting on your Instagram account is no longer just about getting content out quickly. To grow, you need to combine the following strategies:

  • Publish at peak times.
  • Keep visuals consistent and accessible.
  • Use captions, hashtags and tags to boost discovery.
  • Track what’s working and double down on formats driving reach.

Managing all this, especially as a team, can be overwhelming. Sprout Social streamlines the process by centralizing your planning, publishing and reporting in one intuitive workspace. This helps you build efficiency and deliver consistently polished, on-brand content.

Whether you’re a solo marketer looking to centralize your Instagram workflow or a growing team ready to scale, Sprout has a plan designed for you. Try Sprout Social’s free 30-day trial today–no credit card required.

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