Thursday, 12 March 2026

Schedule Threads posts: The definitive guide for brands and businesses

Threads is moving rapidly and has turned into a place where quick dialogue reaches new audiences. And because it sits inside the Instagram ecosystem, it’s easy to cross-post and build reach without starting from scratch.

But brands now have yet another social network to keep active. So if you’re posting manually, it’s hard to stay consistent, especially when timing matters. Scheduling is the key.

Luckily, you can now schedule Threads posts natively. But if you need to align Threads with your content calendar, manage approvals and plan campaigns, here’s how a tool like Sprout Social gives you more control.

Can you schedule Threads posts?

Meta introduced native scheduling for Threads in August 2024. But how you schedule depends on the tools you use.

You currently have two options to schedule Threads posts:

  • In the Threads app: You can schedule original posts directly using Threads’ built-in scheduling feature on mobile or web. But it has limited support for planning, workflows or analytics.
  • Through third-party tools like Sprout Social: You can schedule Threads posts alongside other social channels. This makes it easy to align content with your full calendar, reuse assets, manage approvals, add alt text and measure performance, all in one place.

For brands that manage multiple social media accounts, it’s tough to align Instagram Threads posts with the rest of your content if you’re scheduling through the native app. A platform like Sprout Social offers more control since you can plan Threads posts alongside Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn and other social network content from the same calendar. You can also schedule at optimal times, manage approvals and reuse assets without duplicating work.

Threads is evolving quickly, so its native capabilities may grow. But for now, native tools only support basic scheduling, not full campaigns, workflows, analytics or team collaboration.

What types of Threads posts can you schedule with Sprout?

You can schedule and publish these Threads formats using Sprout Social:

  • Text-only posts
  • Single image posts
  • Video posts

Sprout tip: When you schedule Threads image posts in Sprout, you can add alt text directly in the workflow to improve accessibility and discoverability. While Threads doesn’t support alt text for video yet, Sprout helps you stay inclusive and searchable across the formats that do. And with the platform’s Asset Library—where approved visuals, captions and templates live—you can scale high-quality, on-brand Threads content without recreating it every time.

 

What types of Threads should you publish natively?

If you’re posting interactive formats like polls, quizzes and surveys, you must publish them directly in the Threads app.. No third-party social media scheduling tools currently support these types of posts. However, as platform APIs expand, this may change, so it’s worth checking back for updates.

How to schedule Threads posts the native way

Native scheduling works well if you only need to plan a few basic posts and don’t need workflows, advanced analytics or a shared content calendar. This process keeps you inside the Threads or Instagram apps and doesn’t require another tool.

How to schedule posts with the Threads app

Here’s how to schedule a post directly inside Threads:

1. Open the Threads app or website and start a new post.

2. Add your caption, image(s) or video.

3. Click the three-dot menu in the top right corner and select Schedule.

The new thread interface in Threads shows the three-dot menu dropdown with options to “Add AI Label” and “Schedule.”

Source: Threads

4. Choose your date and time.

Threads’ scheduling interface shows date and time options with a button to schedule posts.

Source: Threads

5. Click the Schedule button to confirm.

This method works well for simple scheduling, but you can’t view your Threads campaigns alongside other social media content or manage them in a calendar.

How to schedule Threads posts with the Instagram app

Instagram doesn’t let you schedule posts directly to Threads. But you can cross-post to Threads when you’re posting live on Instagram.

Here’s how it works:

1. Open the Instagram app and create a new post.

2. Add your caption, media and hashtags.

3. Scroll down and click Also share on…

Instagram’s posting options screen shows the option to “Also share on…”

Source: Instagram

4. Toggle on the option to share to your Threads profile.

Instagram’s “Also share on” screen shows toggle options to share on Threads, Facebook and Your story.

Source: Instagram

5. Click Share to post on both Instagram and Threads in real time.

Keep in mind that this Instagram cross-posting option only works for real-time publishing, not for scheduled Instagram posts. If you schedule content on Instagram, it won’t auto-share to Threads when it goes live.

How to schedule Threads posts with Meta Business Suite

Meta Business Suite supports Facebook and Instagram scheduling, but it doesn’t currently recognize Threads as a standalone destination. So it doesn’t trigger the Threads cross-post toggle.

Here’s what this means:

  • You can’t schedule Threads posts in Meta Business Suite.
  • You can schedule Instagram posts on Meta Business Suite, but those posts won’t automatically cross-post to Threads.
  • If you want to schedule natively, you’ll have to publish through the Threads app or use a third-party scheduling platform.

How to schedule Threads posts with Sprout Social

Sprout Social turns Threads into a part of your broader social media plan. This allows you to strategize, create, schedule, approve and measure Threads content alongside Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok and more. It also gives you a shared content calendar, asset library, tagging, approvals, alt text, Smart Inbox and performance reporting, all in one place.

Here’s how you can use Sprout to schedule Threads posts:

Step 1: Connect your Threads profile

To connect to Sprout and schedule Threads posts, your Sprout user role needs permission to manage social profiles and publish content. If you don’t see those options, your account admin may need to enable them.

Once this is ready, head to these sections:

1. Go to Account and SettingsConnect a profile (or select the +Connect a Profile option in Groups & Social Profiles).

Sprout Social’s menu shows the Connect a Profile option under Account and settings.

2. Choose the Group you want to add the profile to.

Sprout Social’s interface shows group selection and options to connect Facebook, Instagram or Threads profiles.

3. Click Connect in the Threads option.

4. Click Go to Threads.

5. Follow the prompts to authorize and connect your Threads profile.

Once you’ve connected your profile, Threads becomes available in Compose, Calendar, Smart Inbox and Analytics.

Step 2: Schedule Threads posts using Compose

Once your Threads account is connected to Sprout, here’s how you schedule a Threads post:

1. Click Compose in your Sprout dashboard.

2. Choose your Threads profile in the profile picker.

Sprout’s profile picker interface shows a search bar and selected Threads profiles with checkmarks.

3. Craft your post using text, media, emojis and hashtags.

  • Sprout supports text, single- and multi-image posts (up to 20 images), and video.
  • Click Add Alt Text on images to improve their accessibility and discoverability

4. (Optional) Select any Approval Workflow you need

5. (Optional) Add tags or campaign tags or set up an approval workflow if other team members need to review.

6. Pick your date and time, or use Optimal Send Times to schedule based on engagement data.

Sprout Social’s scheduling screen shows a time selector, the Optimal Send Times option and a Schedule button.

7. Click Schedule to schedule your post.

Step 3: Manage Threads posts in Calendar View

Once you’ve scheduled your post, it will appear in the Publishing Calendar alongside your other social content.

Here’s how you can manage this content directly in the calendar:

  • Drag and drop to adjust the date
  • Filter by campaign, network or tag
  • Switch between List, Week or Month views
  • Preview how your scheduled content looks across all social channels

Sprout doesn’t yet support Threads polls or interactive post types. But it does give you everything else you need to manage Threads professionally, from ideation to publishing to performance tracking.

Why schedule Threads posts?

By scheduling Threads content, you can run the platform as an integrated part of your social media strategy instead of a side feed. And once Threads sits inside your wider strategy, your planning, timing and tracking become more intentional. This opens the door to consistency, better engagement, cleaner data and a stronger brand voice on the platform. In turn, you get another purposeful channel to support awareness, loyalty and long-term growth.

Here are the benefits of scheduling Threads posts:

Save time and boost team efficiency

When you post on Threads manually, you’ll have to keep switching apps, copying captions, resizing media and working out the right posting times, all while managing multiple social networks. That constant context-switching slows your team down and leaves them with less time for strategic work.

However, when you use a scheduler like Sprout Social, you can batch-create Threads content alongside Instagram, TikTok and LinkedIn posts in one place. It also allows you to repurpose existing assets from the Asset Library, apply campaign tags and plan an entire campaign in a single session.

When you save time on manual posting in this way, you’ll gain time to analyze performance, respond to conversations and build a connection with your audience.

Maintain a consistent brand voice and content cadence

Brands build trust when they show up consistently, especially on a platform like Threads, where conversations move quickly. Scheduling helps brands on Threads maintain that steady flow of content, even during busy periods, launches and holidays or outside work hours.

Scheduling is especially useful for global audiences. For instance, if your followers are active across time zones, you don’t need to be online at 2 a.m. to match peak engagement. Scheduling keeps your content on-brand, on time and in line with your wider content calendar.

Capture and deepen audience loyalty

On Threads, the real work begins after you post. Engagement happens fast, and responses are what shape the conversation. When you schedule content ahead of time, you’re free to focus on replies during the “golden hour”: right after it goes live. That’s when you can answer comments, add context, jump into conversation threads and build real loyalty.

In other words, scheduling doesn’t automate engagement. It instead makes space for it.

Measure what matters and prove your Threads ROI

When you post at random times, with different formats and captions, and with no real pattern, your posts will have too many variables changing at once. That means you might see that one post performs better while another underperforms, but you won’t know why. Was it the topic? The format? The timing? The cadence? Or just luck?

Scheduling creates more controlled conditions to examine your posts within. That’s because when your posts go out at planned times and regular intervals, you remove timing and cadence as variables. That means you can start to compare like with like: text vs image, short caption vs long caption and conversational tone vs informative tone.

And when you can look past post-by-post performance, you’ll start to see real answers to questions like:

  • Does your audience respond more to conversational text or single-image posts?
  • Does engagement increase when posts go out at the same time every weekday?
  • Does your audience respond better to questions, prompts or commentary?

Ultimately, scheduling gives you the consistency you need to create measurable insights from your Threads metrics. With a controlled and consistent rhythm, you’ll start to see which elements actually matter beyond timing.

And with tools like Sprout’s Premium Analytics (available as a paid add-on), you can dissect these elements and drill down to see what really affects performance and ROI. It also lets you tag campaigns, filter by format and track performance over time. This shows you what actually drives engagement, reach or follower growth, not just whether you posted at the right time.

Best practices for your Threads scheduling strategy

Effective scheduling turns Threads from reactive posting into intentional brand storytelling that supports conversation, consistency and insight. But that storytelling only works when it fits the pace of the platform.

Threads moves in real time, and the posts that travel furthest are the ones that spark replies, not just likes. A strong posting schedule gives you the space to do that responsive work. Without it, you’re always catching up and missing the conversations that matter.

Here’s how to plan, schedule and optimize Threads posts in a way that builds reach, engagement and brand equity:

Find your optimal time to post (and test it)

Timing affects how far your posts travel. If you post when your audience is most active, for example, you’ll increase your chances of seeing early replies. This is a key signal to Threads that your audience finds your content engaging, which helps to push it out further.

You can manually test the best times to post in your Threads analytics dashboard by tracking when your posts perform best. To do this, look at the time you sent each post and count the replies, reposts and impressions you gained. Then track the patterns to see which times yield the most engagement. You’ll want to experiment with different posting times to confirm that these are the times that encourage the most engagement. But this process takes time, and it’s hard to stay consistent.

Alternatively, Sprout’s ViralPost® feature uses your historical performance data to recommend the best posting times and automatically schedule Threads posts when your audience is most likely to engage. Because these recommendations are based on real behaviour, not guesswork, you get a consistent, evidence-backed way to publish when conversation is most likely to spark. ViralPost does the heavy lifting so your testing, timing and performance align.

Sprout Social's publishing workflow includes an option to schedule your posts and use its AI-powered Optimal Times feature

Integrate Threads into your cross-channel content plan

Threads works best when it extends conversations that you’ve started on other platforms. Think of it as the conversation layer of your social strategy—the place where ideas from other channels grow legs. So, rather than reposting the same content across networks, use Threads to react, extend or spark discussion around what you’ve already published elsewhere.

Here are some simple ways to extend your content across platforms using Threads:

  • From Instagram: If you share a carousel or Reel with tips, use Threads to ask a follow-up question like, “Which one would you actually try?” or “What did we miss?”
  • From TikTok: After posting a tutorial or story, start a Threads conversation by asking, “Has anyone tried this? Did it actually work?” or share a quick takeaway to invite replies.
  • From LinkedIn: Turn a thought leadership post into a casual, opinion-driven prompt like, “Do you agree with this?” or “Is this still true in 2026?”

These strategies give content a second life in a more conversational tone for a different audience, rather than simply duplicating it.

Once you start thinking about Threads as part of a bigger cross-channel dialogue, you need a clear way to plan it. Sprout helps you strategize this wider dialogue intentionally by giving you a single place to map everything out. In the Content Calendar, you can see Threads posts alongside your Instagram, TikTok and LinkedIn content and tag them under the same campaign. This helps you see where posts connect in tone and context, so your Threads add to the story rather than simply repeating it.

Use alt text to make your content accessible

Social media accessibility should be your brand standard so you don’t cut anyone out of the conversation. But it also has a search bonus.

When you add alt text in Sprout while scheduling Threads image posts, you help screenreader users access your content. On top of that, you’ll give search engines (social search included) a richer context to index your content under the right searches. In this sense, alt text improves both inclusivity and discoverability at the same time.

Plan for the conversation, not just the post

On Threads, posting is just the start. What really builds loyalty is how quickly and thoughtfully you respond.

When your post goes live, the real work begins. Use that first hour to jump into the comments, ask clarifying questions and guide the conversation. Scheduling your content ahead of time frees you up to focus entirely on responding in real time whether that’s answering questions, adding extra context or sparking follow-up discussions.

After all, engagement drives more engagement. And consumers notice. In fact, 63% say they feel more connected to brands when the brand responds to them.

Analyze your performance and iterate

Scheduling isn’t a “set-and-forget” shortcut to social media. It just gives you a stable foundation to test formats, timing and frequency. That means you can try out different post types, tones and caption styles, then monitor engagement trends to see what works.

Rather than manually sifting through this data in your Threads dashboards, you can use Sprout’s Threads performance reporting to compare post formats, track engagement spikes and see which conversations contributed most to reach. From there, you can refine your posts to resonate with the audience you’re building.

Go beyond scheduling with Sprout’s full Threads toolkit

Threads is a fast-moving channel. To keep up, brands need to move away from spontaneous posting and instead build strategy and consistency by scheduling posts. This gives you room for real engagement.

But to turn this engagement into part of your wider content plan, you need a tool like Sprout that provides shared calendars, team workflows and performance insights that show what actually works.

Ready to grow your brand on Threads? Start your free Sprout Social trial today.

The post Schedule Threads posts: The definitive guide for brands and businesses appeared first on Sprout Social.



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Wednesday, 11 March 2026

How to build a strategic YouTube dashboard: A guide to YouTube Studio and beyond

A strong YouTube strategy starts with understanding your data. While the native YouTube dashboard, officially known as YouTube Studio, gives you core metrics for video management, it often operates in a silo.

For marketing teams, a successful strategy requires a social media reporting solution that connects video performance to broader business goals.

This guide walks you through the essentials of the native YouTube Studio dashboard and shows you how to build a strategic, cross-channel dashboard using a unified reporting platform like Sprout Social.

What is the YouTube dashboard (and where to find it)?

Your YouTube dashboard is the central command center for creators and brands located inside YouTube Studio. It’s the backend interface where you manage videos, playlists and live streams, moderate comments, review monetization eligibility, view channel analytics and control channel settings.

You can access YouTube Studio in two ways:

  • Desktop: Go to studio.youtube.com after signing in to your YouTube account. Or, click on your YouTube profile picture and select YouTube Studio.
  • Mobile: Download the YouTube Studio app for iOS or Android to monitor performance, manage comments and edit metadata on the go.

While YouTube Studio is essential for managing any channel, marketers and social media teams often need deeper reporting than what the native tool provides. To connect YouTube data with cross-network insights, you need a third-party platform.

A tour of your YouTube Studio dashboard

Your YouTube Studio dashboard acts as the control center for everything related to your YouTube channel. Whether you’re publishing YouTube videos, reviewing analytics or managing community guidelines, this is where you start.

Below is a complete walkthrough of the key tabs and why they matter to marketers building a data-driven YouTube strategy.

The Channel dashboard: Your 30,000-foot view

When you first log into YouTube Studio, you land on the Channel dashboard—your high-level snapshot of recent activity so you can check channel health in seconds.

Channel dashboard showing analytics, a summary, top videos and subscribers

This page functions as your mission control. It pulls together core metrics so you can quickly evaluate channel performance without digging into individual reports.

  • Performance snapshot: Track views, watch time and subscriber changes for your channel over a recent period (e.g., last 28 days)
  • Latest video performance: Ranks your most recent upload against your previous videos using metrics like views, click‑through rate and average view duration
  • Recent comments: A quick-access feed to review and reply to the latest viewer comments
  • Known issues: YouTube’s status widget listing widespread bugs, outages or analytics/reporting delays
  • News and Creator Insider: Updates on network features or trends that may impact your strategy

Creator Insider, Ask Studio and other news items in the dashboard

The Content tab: Your video management hub

The Content tab is where you manage your entire YouTube channel library, including long-form videos, Shorts, posts, playlists and past live stream recordings.

Channel content dashboard showing videos and metrics

You perform the following tasks in your YouTube content library:

  • Optimizations: Edit titles, descriptions and thumbnails to improve CTR and optimize for the YouTube algorithm
  • Visibility and restrictions: Manage visibility settings (Public, Private or Unlisted) and review copyright claims

Consistent metadata, strong titles and accurate visibility settings directly influence your discoverability, watch time and overall channel performance.

The Analytics tab: Your core data deep dive

The Analytics tab is where marketers spend most of their time. It houses the metrics that help you understand not only what happened, but also why it happened—the foundation of any strategic decision.

Analytics for showing Overview, Content, Audience and Trends tabs

You’ll find four major sub-sections in the Analytics tab:

  • Overview: High-level metrics like views, watch time, subscriber growth, real-time activity and top videos
  • Content: Subscribers, impressions, how viewers find you, new viewers, and traffic sources
  • Audience: Watch behavior, popular videos with different audiences (new, casual and regular), videos that grow your audience list, watch time from subscribers and viewer demographics
  • Trends: Insights into top-performing formats, content types and topics based on user behavior

Key metrics here include impressions, traffic sources and audience retention curves. These reveal how viewers discover your videos, when they drop off and what keeps them engaged.

The Community tab: Your community pulse

The Community tab gives you visibility into conversations around your channel. It includes the following insights.

  • Comments: A filterable feed showing viewer comments, the video they came from and moderation tools
  • Viewer posts: Depending on your channel’s eligibility, you may have access to YouTube’s Community posts, allowing you to publish updates, polls or images directly to your audience
  • Mentions: A running list of every time your channel is mentioned across YouTube—via titles, descriptions, Shorts or Community posts

Monitoring comments and mentions enables you to respond faster, spot trends and maintain a healthy community presence—signals that tell the algorithm your content is valuable.

Community dashboard showing comments, mentions and viewer posts

Other YouTube Studio tabs

You’ll also find several specialized tabs that support channel management:

  • Language: Tools for adding translations and improving accessibility
  • Content detection: Copyright insights and matching detection
  • Earn: Monetization settings, revenue analytics and eligibility status
  • Customization: Layout, branding elements and profile picture updates
  • Audio library: Free music and sound effects for your videos

These tabs help you maintain brand consistency, monitor monetization and ensure your content meets YouTube’s community guidelines.

YouTube tabs for its dashboard

Why the native YouTube reporting dashboard isn’t enough for marketing teams

YouTube Studio offers essential insights for managing a channel, but most marketing teams need a more complete picture to understand how YouTube contributes to business outcomes.

Native channel analytics are powerful for creators, yet they operate in a silo—separate from the rest of your social media strategy.

For brands, agencies and cross-functional teams, relying solely on native analytics presents several strategic challenges:

Isolated YouTube data limits strategic insights

YouTube Studio only shows YouTube metrics. Native tools cannot compare your video performance to Instagram Reels, TikTok posts or LinkedIn videos. To understand true performance impact, marketers need to evaluate YouTube videos alongside other social media content.

Without cross-network visibility, it’s difficult to understand whether a spike in watch time or a drop in subscriber count is part of a larger trend.

Inefficient workflows for teams

Marketing teams often need to share performance snapshots, respond to comments and review video analytics collaboratively. But native access often requires sharing login credentials or manually exporting data into spreadsheets, slowing down collaboration for cross-functional teams.

As your YouTube channel grows, teams need a central place to analyze engagement, manage notifications and coordinate responses without switching tabs or sharing personal credentials.

Lack of customizable, comparative views

The native YouTube studio dashboard offers fixed views. While the native tool provides must-have metrics, it wasn’t designed for complex business reporting, multi-profile management.

Because of these limitations in the layout, you can’t easily build:

  • Campaign-level reports
  • Side-by-side comparisons of top videos
  • Tag-based segments
  • Long-term trend visualizations
  • Multi-channel QBR dashboards

Difficult to tie YouTube analytics to business impact

Marketers need to understand not just what the data says, but what it means.

Native tools don’t connect channel performance to ROI, audience growth or cross-channel influence—a gap solved by using Sprout Social’s unified social media reporting tools.

While all of these limitations exist for YouTube Studio, it doesn’t mean you’re stuck with blind spots. Instead, use a platform like Sprout to consolidate your social media marketing channels and get a more in-depth analysis of YouTube.

What’s included with Sprout’s YouTube analytics dashboard?

Sprout Social unifies your YouTube analytics with the rest of your social strategy and creates a cohesive reporting experience, transforming raw data into business intelligence.

Sprout surfaces essential data in an organized, intuitive way that helps you understand your YouTube videos in the context of everything else your team is producing.

This turns day-to-day reporting into strategic insight, especially when you’re managing campaigns across multiple platforms. Here are some specific reports you can create:

YouTube Videos Report: View YouTube performance at a glance

Sprout’s YouTube Videos Report offers a clean, visual overview of how each video is performing. You can sort by views, engagements, average view duration, visibility status and publish date to quickly identify high-performing content and understand whether a new upload is resonating with viewers.

prout’s Youtube Videos dashboard showing different video posts with analytics

When you need to go deeper, Sprout’s Premium Analytics reveals long-term performance patterns through trend graphs and comparative visualizations. It’s especially useful for reporting on growth and surfacing insights for leadership.

Profile Performance Report: Gain insights across all your social accounts

The Profile Performance Report brings your cross-network analytics into a single view so you can understand how YouTube fits into your entire social media ecosystem.

It aggregates total engagements across platforms and breaks out YouTube-specific actions such as likes, dislikes, comments, shares, annotation clicks, card interactions and new subscribers.

The report also shows how your videos contributed to cross-network video views and overall audience growth. While it doesn’t display impressions or post link clicks for YouTube, you can still compare publishing activity and subscriber gains across channels to evaluate YouTube’s contribution to larger brand objectives.

Post Performance Report: Dive into video performance

For a deep dive into individual content, the Post Performance Report offers a consolidated view of both publishing details and engagement metrics.

It shows how viewers interacted with each video, how those interactions compare to others in your library and which creative decisions—such as thumbnails or titles—may have influenced results.

Published Posts for Post Performance showing different content and metrics

Because you pull all relevant data into one place, you can track performance without manually piecing together metrics from separate screens. This makes this report especially useful for understanding the “why” behind your top-performing uploads.

Tag Performance Report: Track results by campaign

Sprout’s Tagging capabilities turn your analytics into a truly strategic YouTube dashboard. Tags act as custom labels you attach to videos—such as campaigns, content pillars, product categories or publishing themes.

Once you apply tags, Sprout automatically organizes performance data by tag so you can see which initiatives are driving the strongest results.

This moves you beyond simply tracking what performed well to understanding why certain formats or topics consistently deliver impact.

For marketing teams, this is often the missing piece that transforms raw YouTube analytics into actionable strategy.

How to build a YouTube dashboard with Sprout Social

Building a strategic YouTube dashboard in Sprout is a straightforward process that gives you full control over your analytics.

Once connected to Sprout, your data is automatically organized into flexible reports you can customize for your team.

The entire workflow helps you move from monitoring metrics to understanding how your YouTube videos contribute to business results across your entire social media strategy.

Here’s the step-by-step process of setting up your YouTube dashboard in Sprout:

Step 1. Connect your YouTube channel

Integrating your YouTube channel with Sprout Social only takes a few minutes. This secure, one-time setup authorizes Sprout to pull your channel analytics, populate reports and manage publishing.

To connect your YouTube account to Sprout, go to Account and Settings in Sprout, then click Connect a Profile.

YouTube “connect” button on Sprout Socia

Once connected, your historical data begins to sync automatically. This gives your team access to a complete picture of video performance.

Step 2. Select your core YouTube reports

After your YouTube account is connected, Sprout generates your base YouTube reporting views immediately. Navigate to the Reports tab to access your Videos Report, Profile Performance Report and Post Performance Report.

Each report highlights different layers of insight—from high-level publishing trends to deep dives into individual video metrics. This ensures you start with a business-ready dashboard without building anything from scratch.

Step 3. Customize your reports with tags

Customization is where your YouTube dashboard becomes uniquely yours. Sprout’s filtering options enable you to segment your data by date ranges, visibility status, video types, post attributes and more.

Using Tags takes this further by transforming your analytics into a strategic storytelling tool. When you apply tags—like “Product Demo,” “Q4 Campaign,” “Event Recap,” “Playlist Series” or “How-to tutorial”—Sprout organizes your analytics around those themes.

Tag Report dashboard showing volume for posts and sent messages

This lets you understand which content pillars consistently perform well, which campaigns drove the strongest results and which videos contributed most to your KPIs. This replaces manual spreadsheet sorting with a dashboard that reflects exactly how your marketing team works.

Step 4. Build cross-network reports

To build a complete performance picture, add your YouTube analytics to Sprout’s cross-network reporting. This enables you to compare YouTube performance directly alongside Instagram Reels, TikTok videos, LinkedIn posts and other social media channels.

This enables you to create executive summaries, quarterly business reviews and cross-channel campaign reports from one place. The consolidated workflow makes it easier to present results to stakeholders, identify patterns across platforms and optimize your content strategy based on the full customer journey.

Profile Performance Cross-network report showing stats per network

5 essential YouTube metrics to track in your dashboard

Once you centralize your YouTube analytics, you need to know which metrics reveal the most about your channel performance.

Each metric below influences how the YouTube algorithm surfaces your content, and each one gives you practical insights for optimizing your next upload.

Watch time and audience retention

Watch time shows how many total minutes viewers spend watching your content, while audience retention reveals exactly where viewers stay engaged and where they drop off.

These two metrics work together to highlight how compelling your video structure is.

For example, if you see a steep decline at the 30-second mark, treat it as a signal to tighten your intro or adjust your pacing. A smooth retention curve often means your video delivers what the viewer expects from the title and thumbnail.

Traffic sources

Traffic sources tell you how viewers find your videos, whether through YouTube Search, Suggested Videos, external websites or direct links.

This metric shows whether your content is discoverable, recommended or primarily driven by off-platform promotion.

When YouTube Search is one of your top sources, it means your keyword strategy is strong and worth doubling down on. A high percentage of Suggested Videos usually means your content keeps viewers on the network, making it easier for the algorithm to recommend your uploads more often.

Subscriber growth rate

Subscriber growth shows how effectively your videos convert casual viewers into long-term followers.

Instead of looking only at total subscribers, this metric highlights which specific videos drove the strongest growth.

For example, if a particular tutorial drove a noticeable subscriber spike, consider expanding that playlist or building similar content.

Engagement rate

Engagement rate measures how actively your audience interacts with your content through comments, likes and shares. These engagement metrics reveal how viewers feel about your videos and whether your message resonates.

Comments in particular give you direct access to audience sentiment and questions, offering insights you can use to refine your storytelling or identify new content opportunities.

Sprout’s Smart Inbox enables you to track, filter and respond to YouTube comments in one place, ensuring you maintain consistent engagement across your channel without needing to toggle between tabs in the YouTube Studio dashboard.

Click-through rate (CTR)

CTR shows how effectively your titles and thumbnails convince viewers to click, making it one of the most important signals in the YouTube algorithm.

A low CTR paired with strong watch time often means the content itself is strong, but the packaging needs refinement.

If viewers click but quickly leave, your thumbnail or title might be promising something different than the video delivers.

Treat CTR as a guide for A/B tests to better understand what sparks curiosity.

Go beyond data to drive your YouTube strategy

A successful YouTube strategy goes beyond checking metrics inside YouTube Studio. The native dashboard gives you essential data, but a unified platform like Sprout Social turns that data into a cross-channel strategy you can act on.

When your YouTube analytics sit alongside insights from Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn and other social media channels, you eliminate silos, support smoother team collaboration and build business-ready reports with tags, filters and flexible views.

Ready to create a YouTube dashboard that helps your team make smarter decisions? Start your free trial of Sprout Social.

The post How to build a strategic YouTube dashboard: A guide to YouTube Studio and beyond appeared first on Sprout Social.



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Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Social media trends in the UK (2026): A strategic guide for marketers

It is safe to say, social media is no longer just a digital hangout, it’s the UK’s primary answer engine. It is the place your audience goes to diagnose a problem, validate a purchasing decision and hold businesses accountable.

As UK social marketers, we thrive on the fast-paced nature of our industry. But let’s be brutally honest: staying ahead isn’t getting any easier. Between pinpointing exactly where your target audience is actually spending their time and finding your footing in the “human-AI editor” era, the pressure is palpable.

To drive meaningful growth this year, your social media strategy must graduate from the experimental phase of AI and short-form video. The new mandate is built on helpful advice from experts, niche community building and transparency.

“Brand-consumer communication these days is more instant, transparent and community-driven than ever before. It’s really important for brands to adapt to these changes. Otherwise, they run the risk of losing trust from their audience,” says Kikora Mason, Vice President, Social Media + Community Management at Chase, in a recent Sprout Social exploration of digital culture.

Thankfully, the exhausting scramble for a fleeting viral moment is officially over. Today’s market leaders are trading one off posts for long-term loyalty, focusing on episodic storytelling and optimising for social search.

Worried about pouring your budget and bandwidth into the wrong channels? You are not alone. But without a robust data foundation, your strategy is effectively running blind, leaving the door wide open for agile competitors to swoop in and capture your audience’s attention.

Let’s cut through the noise. Discover exactly what you need to prioritise this year with insights drawn from Sprout Social’s Social Media Content Strategy Report.

What are the current social media trends in the UK?

Before we dive in at the deep end, let’s look at the bigger picture. Here is a quick breakdown of the legacy tactics UK marketers need to leave behind, and the social media strategies driving growth this year.

Outdated Strategy The 2026 UK trend Why?
Viral-chasing Episodic series Algorithms reward viewer retention.
AI-only copy AI for data analysis Generic robot copy degrades trust.
Public support feeds Dark Social (WhatsApp) Users crave private, 1:1 support.
Reactive activism Values-driven activism Buyers demand real-world action.
Broadcast feeds Optimising for Social Search Buyers want visual peer proof.

Now that you have the summary, lets jump into the detail:

1. Using AI in social media marketing (without losing the human touch)

While the global conversation remains fixated on AI’s ability to generate content, UK marketers are facing a critical disconnect. Our research shows that while 69% of UK marketers consider their strategy effective , consumers are clear: they want human-generated content as their top priority. Meanwhile, UK marketers are making AI-generated content their #1 priority for 2026.

Chart of UK marketers top 5 priorities in 2026

Why the disconnect? Marketers are often under-resourced and seeking scale to combat bandwidth constraints. However, pushing out generic, AI-authored content degrades trust. The solution isn’t to abandon AI, but to shift its use case. Currently, only 40% of marketers use AI tools for performance reporting and analysis. The real potential of AI for marketers isn’t content creation, but content analysis to garner timely audience insights.

UK AI in social media spotlight: Octopus Energy

Octopus Energy uses AI to process complex energy data, but they maintain a distinctly “un-corporate” British voice through human-led refinement.

Octopus Energy Facebook Homepage

By ensuring technology supports rather than replaces the human connection, they build authentic trust.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Prioritise the “human overlay”: Use AI to analyse data or build script outlines, but ensure a local UK editor refines the final copy to maintain British idioms and tone.
  • Adopt transparency: 43% of consumers rate brands as only “fair or poor” at publishing truly original content. Maintain trust by clearly labelling AI-enhanced media.
  • Refine your workflows: Plug AI into manual workflows like data analysis to give your team time back to craft stronger human-generated content.

2. Binge-worthy retention: The rise of the social media series

Let’s be honest: although viral marketing still exists, for most brands it has been replaced by more reliable episodic storytelling. Ranked as the second-highest priority for UK marketers in 2026, creating episodic social media series allows brands to build proper, “binge-worthy” retention engines.

But why the shift? If we look at the root cause, constantly trying to reinvent the wheel for every post leads to creative burnout and a disjointed audience experience. Instead, short-form video (under 60 seconds), the undisputed king of formats across Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X, is perfectly suited to bite-sized, recurring concepts. Think of it like your favourite TV show; an episodic structure gives your audience a compelling reason to stick around for the next instalment.

It effectively turns passive, idle scrollers into a loyal, invested community. Crucially, social media algorithms lap this up. Because social networks are desperate to keep users on their apps for as long as possible, their algorithms inherently reward retention. By consistently bringing returning audiences back to your profile, you signal high value to the platform, earning you better organic reach across the board.

UK social media series spotlight: M&S Food

M&S Food’s Insider Programme turn their employees into brand influencers by creating episodic TikTok series like “What’s New in the Foodhall.”

M&S Foodhall Longbridge Insta grid with a range of images including employee influencers

By creating a recurring format that followers look forward to, they’ve built a community that returns for the characters as much as the products.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Cast your in-house talent: It’s time to ditch the corporate broadcasts. Why? Because people connect with people, not logos. By consistently featuring familiar faces from your own team, you build genuine connection with your viewers. When your audience recognises a face, they pause their scrolling, effectively turning cold prospects into a warm, invested community that wants to hear what you have to say.
  • Leverage creator equity: Don’t just pay an influencer for a one-off shoutout. UK audiences are savvy; they can spot a transactional cash-grab a mile off, and it does nothing for your long-term retention. Instead, invite relevant creators to feature as recurring guests in your series. This transitions the dynamic from a standard sponsored ad to a genuine partnership, allowing you to seamlessly borrow their hard-earned community trust. If you’re keen to scale these partnerships properly, dive into our comprehensive guide on crafting an impactful influencer marketing strategy.

3. The shift from social feeds to social search

When was the last time you Googled a product recommendation and actually trusted the first page of results? UK consumers are increasingly moving from traditional search engines in favour of social networks to find authentic, human-verified answers. Social media isn’t just a place to endlessly scroll anymore; it has officially evolved into the modern “Answer Engine.”

Modern consumers are highly skeptical of overly polished, faceless affiliate articles. They crave visual proof and peer validation. They want to see a product in action, used by a real person, to get the unfiltered truth before parting with their hard-earned cash.

If you think this is just a fleeting Gen Z fad, the data tells a different story. While it’s true that for Gen Z, TikTok is a search engine and the top channel for product discovery (with 49% of Gen Z consumers turning to the platform), older demographics are actively searching elsewhere. Facebook is actually the #1 network for product discovery, with nearly 40% of social users using it to find new products. Meanwhile, YouTube has solidified itself as a budding destination for product education, where 24% of users find new products.

UK social search spotlight: Gymshark

Gymshark know their audience uses social media as an Answer Engine. Instead of just posting highly polished adverts, they actively optimise their content and creator partnerships for search.
When you search for them on TikTok, the results are flooded with highly specific, keyword-rich videos like “Gymshark Everyday Hold review,” “What to buy from the Gymshark sale,” and “Gymshark beginner workout.” They ensure their captions, on-screen text, and hashtags are packed with the exact terms their community is searching for.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Optimise for Search and GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation): Treat your social posts like you would a high-value landing page. Ensure your captions, on-screen text, and video transcripts are packed with natural, conversational keywords. Social algorithms and AI chatbots scrape this exact text to serve up answers to user queries.
  • Pivot to utility-first content: Stop broadcasting a list of your product features. Instead, use social listening tools to uncover the exact, highly specific questions your UK audience is asking, and create content that acts as the definitive, helpful answer.

4. The rise of Dark Social: Building communities on WhatsApp and DMs

The days of relying solely on public feeds for community building are fading. With organic reach proving increasingly difficult to secure, savvy UK marketers are officially shifting their focus to smaller, private digital spaces, often referred to as Dark Social.

The data speaks for itself. In the UK, a staggering 85% of users interact with brands on WhatsApp at least once per week—the highest engagement rate across all surveyed regions. Furthermore, 31% of UK consumers are so invested that they contact brands multiple times per day on the network.

Why the retreat to private messaging apps? As public feeds become heavily saturated with algorithmic recommendations and sponsored ads, users are experiencing severe content fatigue.
British audiences are naturally gravitating towards spaces that feel curated, intimate and entirely free from the noise. Private channels offer a high-trust, low-friction environment. When a customer has a query about a delivery or wants a personalised product recommendation, they want a direct, one-to-one conversation rather than leaving a public comment and hoping for the best.

UK dark social spotlight: ASOS

Drone carrying branded ASOS bag over field advertising their broadcast channel

ASOS cultivates niche resonance by using private digital spaces like Instagram Broadcast Channels to deliver exclusive early-access codes and “lo-fi” updates, fostering loyalty away from the noise of the public feed.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Launch a WhatsApp Channel for Care: 40% of users say they want companies to show up on WhatsApp specifically to provide customer service and support. Treat this as a direct extension of your customer care team rather than just another broadcast channel.
  • Embrace “lo-fi” community building: Shift your support to DMs and private groups. Users want raw, conversational updates and direct dialogue in these spaces, which builds far more trust than highly polished, corporate advertisements.

5. Purpose-driven social media: navigating brand activism in the UK

The days of brands sitting comfortably on the fence are well and truly over. UK consumers are holding businesses to account, ushering in what we can only describe as a proper brand activism renaissance.

The data paints a stark picture: 63% of Gen Z and 57% of Millennials now state they are actively more likely to buy from companies that speak out on specific causes or current affairs that align with their own morals.

Modern buyers don’t just want a utility product; they want their purchases to reflect their personal values. However, when marketers reactively jump on a trending hashtag without a history of caring about the issue, UK audiences instantly clock it as performative. The resulting backlash is often worse than saying nothing at all. True resonance only happens when a brand’s stance is deeply anchored in its existing core values and backed by long-term, tangible action.

UK purpose driven social media spotlight: RSPB The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)

The RSPB perfectly balances purpose with personality. They use Bluesky to inform their 60,000 followers about vital bird conservation efforts, but they cleverly weave in relatable, properly funny bird-inspired memes to drum up engagement.

RSPB bluesky social profile with image of bird in flight

They prove that purpose-driven, activist content doesn’t have to be entirely doom and gloom, it can still be highly entertaining and inherently shareable.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Listen before you speak: The most successful brands use social intelligence to understand what your specific audience genuinely cares about first. If you’re eager to dig deeper into this, discover how to capture and analyse true audience sentiment with our comprehensive guide to social listening.
  • Stick to your brand’s remit: Only speak on issues that organically align with your brand’s heritage or operational footprint. If you can’t back up a supportive social media post with real-world company action or policy, it is always better to hold back and focus on your core offering.

6. Best social media networks for UK businesses in 2026 (Where to invest your budget)

There is a glaring disconnect between where UK brands are spending their social media budgets and where their audience is actually hanging out. Right now, UK marketers are putting all their eggs in the trend baskets, planning to heavily invest their resources into TikTok (73%), Instagram (69%) and Facebook (64%) in 2026.

However, UK consumers are telling a very different story. When asked where they actually plan to spend more of their time, 34% pointed to Facebook, 29% to TikTok and WhatsApp, and a solid 25% to YouTube. Marketers may find themselves shouting into a void on networks their audiences are merely passing through.

Chart of top social media networks UK users plan to spend time on vs networks marketers are investing in

Why are we getting it so wrong? It ultimately boils down to the marketer’s echo chamber. We spend our days reading industry think-pieces about the explosive growth of TikTok, so we assume we absolutely must be there. We constantly chase the shiny new toy and falsely assume legacy platforms are dead or uncool. But the data doesn’t care about what’s cool; it cares about where the attention actually is. By letting our own biases and industry FOMO dictate our channel strategy, we leave a massive, profitable gap for competitors to swoop in and capture our actual buyers.

Actionable takeaways:

  • Don’t sleep on Facebook and YouTube: It might not feel like the sexiest choice, but Facebook marketing remains an absolute powerhouse. It is currently the #1 network for product discovery, with nearly 40% of social users actively using it to find new products. Similarly, YouTube marketing is quietly dominating as a destination for long-form product education, with 24% of users using it to validate their purchases.
  • Audit your channel strategy: Stop relying on gut feeling or copying what the wider industry is doing. You need to strictly cross-reference your channel investments with hard, audience-specific consumption data. If you are pouring hours of resource into Instagram Reels but your core buyers are actually searching for tutorials on YouTube, it’s time to ruthlessly reallocate that budget.

Mastering the new mandate

Success this year requires a shift in mindset. It’s no longer about how many people saw your post, but how many people valued it. By embracing AI as an analysis time saver, investing in episodic storytelling and nurturing private communities, your brand won’t just keep up, it will lead.

Ready to learn more? Download the full 2026 UK Social Media Content Strategy Report for more in-depth data and strategic frameworks.

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Monday, 9 March 2026

7 best Modash alternatives for influencer and creator management

Real marketing campaign success comes from systems that manage, measure and scale your influencer program. If you’re searching for Modash alternatives, you likely need more than just discovery—you need end-to-end functionality that creates a clearer path to measurable ROI and stronger creator partnerships.

The top influencer marketing tools move beyond simple discovery to offer deeper campaign control, transparent attribution and workflow support. This shift is essential for building a data-driven operation designed for growth, giving you a stronger foundation for an impactful influencer marketing strategy.

Why brands look for Modash alternatives

Modash is a strong choice for brands focused primarily on influencer discovery and initial vetting. It has a large creator database and useful features for audience and fraud detection. Its strength lies in quickly identifying a wide array of creators, making it a good starting point for teams just beginning their journey.

However, scaling your influencer strategy requires a platform that manages the entire lifecycle—something Modash doesn’t provide. Marketing leaders look for alternatives to Modash because they need more than just a discovery tool; they need a workflow solution that supports a complete influencer marketing plan.

Some key limitations driving this search include:

  • Limited CRM: Lack of tools to manage ongoing influencer relationships.
  • No approval workflows: Difficulty managing content drafts and compliance.
  • Basic reporting: Need for granular ROI and attribution tracking beyond engagement rates.

To prove the value of your efforts, you require a tool that handles the full spectrum of influencer campaigns, not just the initial search. We’ve compiled a list of the top 7 Modash alternatives to boost your influencer marketing strategy.

1. Sprout Social Influencer Marketing (formerly Tagger)

Sprout Social Influencer Marketing (formerly Tagger) is the all-in-one influencer solution built for marketing leaders who focus on measurable ROI, strategic campaign management and data-driven creator partnerships.

Unlike point solutions that focus only on discovery, Sprout’s platform positions your brand to execute a sophisticated influencer strategy from influencer search to final conversion tracking.

As a specialized, standalone platform within the Sprout ecosystem, it provides the dedicated infrastructure needed to manage complex creator relationships that general social tools can’t handle. While distinct from Sprout’s core social management suite, it works to break down silos by aligning your influencer strategy with your broader social goals in a focused, purpose-built environment.

Discover creators with AI and topical alignment

Finding the right partner is about more than just demographics—it’s about relevance. Sprout’s AI-powered natural language search allows you to discover creators based on the specific topics they talk about, ensuring true alignment with your brand’s niche.

Instead of relying on outdated filters, this approach simplifies the process of finding the right influencers who are already driving conversations relevant to your audience.

Sprout Social Influencer Marketing showing an overview of a creator's profile.

Once you identify potential partners, customizable Brand Safety reporting and Brand Fit Score—which evaluates how closely a creator’s content aligns with your brand by analyzing their content—will help you vet them instantly.

You can automatically flag creators who have posted about high-risk topics that don’t align with your values, optimizing your influencer vetting process and ensuring you protect your brand reputation before you ever send a contract.

Manage end-to-end campaigns

The biggest gap for many searching for Modash alternative influencer marketing platform solutions is the post-discovery workflow. Sprout Influencer Marketing addresses this by providing a comprehensive influencer relationship management suite. The built-in creator CRM eliminates the manual chaos of spreadsheets by centralizing all communications, contracts and deliverables.

A campaign dashboard in Sprout Social Influencer Marketing showing stats like campaign goals, budget, hired creators and more.

You can streamline outreach with bulk tools and utilize custom approval workflows to guarantee compliance across all creator content before it goes live. This allows your team to focus on building relationships rather than managing administrative overhead.

Measure true influencer ROI

Moving past vanity metrics is essential for demonstrating the business impact of your influencer marketing efforts. Sprout Influencer Marketing provides concrete, reliable ROI data, enabling you to prove program value to leadership.

Sprout Social Influencer Marketing platform showing a topic report about skincare.

The platform goes beyond engagement rate by providing conversion attribution capabilities, allowing you to track sales, sign-ups or other key actions back to a specific creator or campaign. And metrics like earned media value (EMV) give brands further proof of your influencer program’s impact on revenue.

This focus on true attribution and ROI helps you benchmark performance more effectively than standalone influencer analytics tools. With Reports, you can also access deep marketing intelligence to benchmark your performance against competitors, giving you the complete picture of our campaign’s success.

Best for: Enterprise brands and agencies seeking an end-to-end, ROI-driven solution.

Request a personalized demo to see how Sprout Influencer Marketing drives measurable results.

Request a demo

 

2. GRIN

GRIN is a creator management platform built specifically for e-commerce brands. It integrates directly with platforms like Shopify, WooCommerce and Amazon. The product focuses on product seeding, relationship management and automated gifting or payment workflows that are essential for high-volume programs.

 GRIN homepage featuring creator marketing tools with a video of a creator cooking beside platform messaging

The system acts as a database for direct-to-consumer (DTC) brands that manage a high volume of creator relationships and need to track product-based conversions. If your primary use is e-commerce enablement, GRIN is a common consideration for managing logistics. Though exploring GRIN alternatives is wise for broader social needs.

Best for: DTC and e-commerce brands running high-volume product seeding campaigns.

3. Upfluence

Upfluence combines influencer discovery with affiliate management tools. The software includes a database with search filters and capabilities that cover the workflow from discovery to relationship management to payment processing.

Upfluence homepage promoting creator revenue tools with a creator post preview and campaign analytics

Upfluence supports various campaign types, including ambassador programs and affiliate networks. For teams comparison options, reviewing Upfluence alternatives can help identify the right fit.

Best for: Brands looking for a broad database and tools to support affiliate or ambassador programs.

4. HypeAuditor

HypeAuditor is an analytics tool primarily focused on auditing creator accounts and analyzing audience demographics. While the platform includes discovery tools, its primary function is generating reports on account quality, specifically looking at fraudulent activity and fake followers.

HypeAuditor homepage promoting its AI-powered influencer marketing platform with campaign metrics and reach data

The tool provides data points like authenticity score, audience quality and reachability metrics. For teams comparing Modash alternatives, HypeAuditor serves primarily as a data verification tool rather than a comprehensive full-cycle campaign management suite. Brands requiring more extensive workflows may want to explore HypeAuditor alternatives.

Best for: Agencies and brands that need deep audience auditing and fraud detection.

5. CreatorIQ

CreatorIQ is an enterprise-level influencer platform that provides customizable solutions for global brands and agencies. The software focuses on compliance, large-scale reporting and campaign measurement across multiple regions and teams.

CreatorIQ homepage promoting its creator-led growth platform with a team collaborating over laptops

It integrates with various third-party systems and APIs to support complex data needs, The platform is built to handle multi-market programs where scalability and permission management are key requirements. Companies evaluating options may find it helpful to compare CreatorIQ alternatives to ensure the right fit for their infrastructure.

Best for: Large, global enterprises with complex integration and compliance needs.

6. Aspire (formerly AspireIQ)

Aspire (formerly AspireIQ) offers a solution for brands that want to build a community-centric and word-of-mouth influencer program. The platform is popular among e-commerce businesses for its automated workflows for product sampling, content collection and generating reviews from customers.

Aspire homepage promoting its word-of-mouth commerce for generating reviews, with a demo button and example posts

Aspire emphasizes the influencer outreach and onboarding process, providing a portal for creators to interact directly with the brand. It’s helpful for brands that view creators as long-term ambassadors rather than one-off transactional partners.

Best for: E-commerce brands focused on building long-term ambassador communities.

7. Influencity

Influencity offers a suite of tools that unifies discovery, CRM and campaign measurement, focusing on global reach and data analysis. It aggregates data from multiple social networks, including YouTube and Twitch, into a single dashboard. The platform allows users to organize influencers into lists and analyze their aggregate reach.

 Influencity homepage promoting its social hub solution with a dashboard video and CTAs to demo and start a trial

The platform is characterized by a user-friendly interface and tools that help small teams and startups execute successful influencer marketing campaigns without a steep learning curve. Its data visualizations simplify the process of comparing creator performance, making it a strong option among top influencer marketing platforms.

For smaller teams or those focused on ecommerce influencer programs, Influencity alternatives also offer a set of tools to manage the influencer marketing lifecycle.

Best for: Small to mid-sized teams seeking a visual interface for discovery and basic management.

How to choose the right Modash alternative for your brand

Your search for Modash alternatives is less about a single feature and more about finding a strategic partner to manage your entire creator lifecycle. The ideal platform should not just show you who to work with, but actively help you manage, track and prove the ROI of those partnerships.

Audit your influencer marketing workflow

Before committing to a new solution, map out your current end-to-end workflow. Where does your team spend the most time? If you use spreadsheets for influencer outreach and content approval, you need a platform with robust CRM and workflow capabilities. This manual process is often the biggest bottleneck to growth.

Compare point solutions vs. a unified platform

The core decision comes down to consolidation and Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). A point solution, like Modash, solves one specific problem—discovery and vetting—meaning you have to cobble together other tools for management and measurement.

However, a unified influencer marketing solution like Sprout Social Influencer Marketing solves the entire workflow from discovery to payment and measurement. Choosing an all-in-one platform reduces integration costs, simplifies team training and ensures all your data resides in one source of truth, making it the strategically smarter decision for high-growth brands.

Move beyond discovery to true creator management

The most successful brands today understand that the best alternative to a discovery-first tool isn’t just another way to find creators—it’s a complete, end-to-end platform that supports every stage of the program.

To maximize the value of your influencer marketing efforts, you need all-in-one functionality that combines AI-driven topical search and sophisticated insights for every stage of your campaign. Make the strategic shift to a platform that centralizes your workflows and drives measurable business conversions.

See how Sprout Social Influencer Marketing helps you take control of your campaigns and prove true ROI. Schedule your demo today.

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Saturday, 7 March 2026

39 Facebook statistics marketers should know in 2026

Facebook turned 22 this year. And somehow, the platform that everyone keeps writing off still has billions of users and remains the largest social network on the planet.

While the “Facebook is dead” narrative hasn’t aged well, the platform has changed in many ways. How people use it, what content performs and where the money flows all look different than they did even two years ago.

This roundup of social media statistics cuts through the noise and gives you the numbers that actually matter for planning your Facebook strategy in 2026.

Top 3 Facebook stats every marketer should know

Facebook remains a core marketing channel for brands. The statistics below highlight the platform’s scale, performance benchmarks and business impact in 2026.

Stat / Metric Insight & Context
Facebook has 3.070 billion monthly active users (MAUs) Facebook remains the largest social platform in the world. This scale gives brands unmatched global reach for awareness campaigns, community building and product discovery.
The average engagement rate on Facebook is 0.15% While engagement rates vary by industry, this benchmark helps marketers evaluate whether their content is performing above or below average. It’s a useful reference point when optimizing posts, ads and organic strategies.
70% of marketing leaders say Facebook delivers positive ROI Facebook continues to prove its business value. Many marketing leaders report strong returns from the platform, especially when combining organic content with targeted advertising and conversion-focused campaigns.

Facebook user & usage statistics

Before you plan what to post, you need to understand who’s on the platform and how they use it to inform your Facebook marketing strategy.

These Facebook user and usage statistics cover monthly active users, daily time spent and how people actually engage with content and brands on Facebook in 2026.

1. Facebook hit 3.070 billion monthly active users worldwide in 2025

With over 3 billion MAUs, Facebook remains one of the largest digital platforms in the world. For marketers, this scale makes it uniquely powerful for mass-reach campaigns, international targeting and awareness efforts across multiple demographics and markets.

2. The average user spends 1 hour and 7 minutes on Facebook daily

This level of daily engagement (67 minutes) shows Facebook still commands a large share of users’ attention despite competition from newer platforms. For marketers, this means multiple opportunities throughout the day for content discovery, ad impressions and brand engagement.

3. Around 85% of social media consumers have a Facebook profile

According to Sprout Social’s 2026 Content Strategy Report, more than 8 in 10 social users are registered on Facebook. The platform’s widespread adoption reinforces its position as one of the most universal social networks. For brands, Facebook remains a critical channel for reaching both mainstream audiences and niche communities.

4. According to Sprout Social, nearly 40% of consumers plan to spend more time on Facebook in 2026

This finding from the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report of growing audience interest contradicts the narrative that Facebook usage is declining. For marketers, the takeaway is that audiences are still returning to the platform, which makes it worthwhile to continue investment in Facebook content and advertising.

5. Facebook is the most popular social media platform for news

According to a 2025 Reuters report, Facebook is still the leading social news network. Millions of users rely on the platform to discover breaking news, trending stories and commentary from publishers. This makes Facebook a powerful channel for sharing timely content, especially for brands in journalism and public affairs.

A chart showing the most important social news networks over the years, with Facebook leading the way.

Image source

6. Facebook is now the #1 platform for product discovery

Sprout’s data shows nearly 40% of social users use Facebook to discover new products. It means people aren’t just stumbling upon products—they’re actively looking for ideas and recommendations here. Marketers should treat Facebook more like a search platform. Use clear captions, helpful content and keywords that make your posts easier to find.

7. Around 35% of Facebook users interact with brand content on the network at least once a day

According to Sprout’s recent Content Strategy Report, users are comfortable interacting with businesses on Facebook. Likes, comments, shares and messages all contribute to ongoing brand conversations. For marketers, Facebook is an ideal place to maintain consistent engagement rather than relying only on occasional campaigns.

8. More than half of consumers say Facebook is their top network for “building community”

Sprout’s data also found that around 52% of users find Facebook Groups and discussions on the platform helpful for connecting with others around shared interests. For marketers, this creates opportunities to build loyal brand communities and engage audiences in deeper conversations.

9. Facebook is the top channel for social customer service

Sprout’s data shows around 45% of users turn to Facebook when they need help from a brand, more than any other social network. For marketers, this means customer support is becoming a core part of the Facebook experience. People expect to ask questions, get answers and even make purchase decisions in the same conversation, often through comments or Messenger.

Facebook audience and demographics statistics

Knowing the size of Facebook’s audience is one thing. Knowing who makes up that audience is what actually shapes your targeting.

These demographic stats break down Facebook’s user base by age, gender, geography and platform overlap to help you understand the full impact of Facebook and build better campaigns.

10. Facebook’s largest audience is aged between 25 to 34

Brands writing off Facebook as a “Boomer platform” are ignoring where a significant portion of its daily activity actually comes from. The 25-34 age bracket makes up the biggest chunk of the platform’s user base, which means it still reaches a core demographic made up of working professionals, young parents and consumers in their prime purchasing years.

11. Facebook has more male-identifying users than female

Facebook’s global audience shows a small majority of male users (56.6%) vs. female users (43%). However, the difference is not dramatic, which means brands can still reach balanced audiences across both groups. Marketers should focus more on interests and behaviors than gender alone when building targeting strategies.

Statista's pie chart showing the gender distribution of Facebook's global audience in 2025.

12. India has the largest Facebook audience size

India leads the world in Facebook users, with the US and Brazil rounding out the top three. For brands running global influencer or ad campaigns, this is a reminder that much of Facebook’s growth comes from emerging markets. Despite massive audience scale, purchasing behavior and spending power can vary widely by region, so geo-targeting matters.

13. Facebook is one of the top social networks used by sports fans

Sports fans are some of the most engaged users on social media, and Facebook (alongside Reddit) ranks among the top platforms they use. For brands in sports, fitness or adjacent industries, Facebook offers a built-in audience that’s actively following teams, leagues and sports content—especially through Groups and Pages.

14. Users aged 65 and above are the most likely to use Facebook

Facebook has become the default social platform for older adults, according to Sprout’s 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report. Users 65+ are the most likely to choose Facebook relative to their overall internet usage, even though the 25-34 bracket remains the largest audience by volume.

This generational range is part of what makes Facebook unique. Few other platforms let brands reach both younger adults and seniors in the same place.

15. Around 78.6% of Facebook users also use Instagram

With nearly 4 in 5 Facebook users also on Instagram, there’s massive overlap between the two networks, according to the 2026 DataReportal Global Overview Report. Marketers can use cross-platform influencer campaigns to reinforce messaging across both platforms. It also means the audiences aren’t as distinct as people assume.

Facebook advertising and marketing statistics

Is Facebook marketing still worth it? And are you getting the most out of your Facebook advertising strategy? Check out these Facebook ads statistics to understand the impact of advertising and marketing on the platform.

16. According to Sprout Social, 62% of marketers plan to invest more time and resources into Facebook in 2026

Despite the narrative that Facebook is losing relevance, the majority of marketers are actually planning to increase their investment in the platform. This signals that the retention and engagement data marketers are seeing internally is strong enough to justify doubling down, even as industry chatter favors TikTok and Instagram.

17. Seventy percent of marketing leaders agree Facebook has the strongest impact on their business compared to any other platform

Sprout’s data shows as many as 7 in 10 marketing leaders say Facebook drives more business impact than any other social platform. The data suggests Facebook’s value shows up more clearly in revenue and pipeline metrics than in vanity engagement numbers.

18. Facebook ads see an average click-through rate (CTR) of 2.59%

Facebook’s average CTR for leads campaigns sits at 2.59% across all industries. For traffic campaigns specifically, the average is 1.71%—up from 1.57% the year prior. Both numbers indicate that Facebook ads continue to improve in performance, even in a more competitive environment.

19. The average cost-per-click (CPC) for Facebook traffic campaigns is about $0.70

Facebook traffic campaigns average just $0.70 per click, making it one of the more affordable paid channels for driving website visits. Leads campaigns run higher at $1.92 CPC (up slightly from $1.88 the prior year), but both figures remain competitive compared to Google Ads and LinkedIn.

20. The average conversion rate on Facebook is 7.72% across industries

Facebook leads campaigns convert at an average of 7.72% across all industries—slightly down from 8.67% the year before. Even with that dip, a nearly 8% conversion rate is strong by any paid media standard and explains why so many marketers still allocate budget to the platform.

Facebook engagement statistics

Engagement on Facebook looks very different than it does on TikTok or Instagram. These benchmarks show you what realistic engagement looks like on the platform, which content formats drive the most interaction and why account size matters more than you might think.

21. The average engagement rate on Facebook is 0.15%

Facebook’s average engagement rate per post is just 0.15%, the lowest among major social platforms. This number hasn’t budged year-over-year. Brands relying purely on organic posting without paid amplification or community engagement are not likely to see meaningful results.

22. The smallest accounts get the highest Facebook engagement rates

Facebook accounts with fewer followers consistently outperform larger ones in engagement rate. This follows the classic micro-influencer pattern: smaller, more niche audiences tend to interact more actively with content. For influencer campaigns, this suggests that partnering with smaller Facebook creators may deliver better engagement per dollar.

Socialinsider's chart showing engagement rate on Facebook by follower count.

23. Albums and photo posts have the highest engagement

Despite the platform’s push toward video, albums and photo posts still drive the highest engagement on Facebook. This is worth noting for content strategies: not every post needs to be a Reel. Static visual content, especially curated image collections, still resonates with Facebook’s user base.

Facebook video statistics

As video marketing continues to gain popularity, it’s important to be aware of how video performs on Facebook. Here are some key Facebook video statistics to inform your strategy:

24. Facebook is one of the top three most effective video marketing platforms

Around 55% of marketers rank Facebook as a top platform for video marketing effectiveness, placing it just behind YouTube (69%) and Instagram (56%). It’s also the fourth-most popular platform for video marketing overall, used by 66% of video marketers. The combination of Reels, Live and in-feed video on Facebook gives brands multiple formats to work with depending on their goals.

Wyzowl's chart showing the most effective video marketing platforms in 2026.

25. Engagement on Facebook Live peaks between 30 and 40 minutes

Facebook Live streams hit their engagement sweet spot around the 30-40 minute mark. Going shorter doesn’t give the algorithm enough time to push the stream to more viewers, and going longer leads to drop-off. For brands planning live sessions, this is the window to aim for.

Facebook Reels statistics

Reels are Facebook’s fastest-growing content format and a priority for Meta’s algorithm. These numbers show what length performs best, which content types users prefer and how Meta’s own creator tools are reshaping how Facebook and Instagram Reels get made.

26. Users are most likely to interact with short-form videos on Facebook

According to Sprout’s Social Media Content Strategy Report, nearly half (48%) of Facebook users say short-form video is the content type they interact with most, followed by text posts (32%) and live video (22%). This confirms that Reels and short clips are now the dominant engagement format on Facebook—a shift that aligns with Meta’s broader algorithmic push toward video.

27. Facebook Reels between 90 to 120 seconds get the most engagement

The engagement sweet spot for Facebook Reels is 90 to 120 seconds. That’s notably longer than the typical TikTok or Instagram Reel, which suggests Facebook’s audience is more willing to sit with slightly longer short-form content. Creators and brands should optimize for this window rather than defaulting to 15-30 second clips.

28. Nearly 10% of the Reels people view each day are created in Meta’s Edits app

Meta’s Edits app (its CapCut competitor) is gaining traction. In their Q4 2025 earnings call, Meta revealed that nearly 1 in 10 daily Reels views now come from content made in Edits, a figure that almost tripled in a single quarter. This shows the platform is successfully pulling creators into its own content creation ecosystem, reducing reliance on third-party editing tools.

Facebook Stories statistics

Stories don’t get as much buzz as Reels, but millions of daily users are hard to ignore. These stats show how people engage with brand Stories on Facebook, from product discovery to website visits, and why the format still deserves a spot in your content mix.

29. More than 500 million people still use Stories every day

Facebook Stories hit 500 million daily users, a number that’s easy to overlook given how much attention goes to Reels. For brands, Stories offer a more intimate, ephemeral format that’s ideal for flash promotions, behind-the-scenes content and direct calls to action—with a massive daily audience to back it up.

30. 50% of Facebook users that watch brand Stories want to be introduced to new products

Half of the people watching brand Stories on Facebook are actively looking to discover new products. That’s a remarkably high purchase intent signal for an organic content format. Brands that treat Stories as a product discovery channel (not just a brand awareness tool) are better aligned with what their audience actually wants.

31. After watching a Story, 58% of people have visited the brand’s website to get more information

Nearly 6 in 10 users say they’ve visited a brand’s website after seeing a Story. This downstream action makes Stories one of the stronger top-of-funnel formats on Facebook for driving traffic, especially when paired with swipe-up links or compelling CTAs.

Facebook Messenger statistics

Messenger is Facebook’s one-to-one communication layer. It’s also a channel most brands underutilize. These Facebook Messenger stats cover audience demographics, daily usage time and what the data means for conversational marketing and customer support.

32. Messenger is used by more than a billion people each month

According to Meta, Facebook Messenger was home to over a billion monthly active users in Q1 2025, making it one of the largest messaging platforms in the world. For brands, that scale opens up opportunities in conversational marketing, customer support automation and direct-response campaigns that meet users where they’re already chatting.

33. Females aged 65+ are most likely to use Facebook Messenger

The heaviest Messenger users are older women over the age of 65, according to DataReportal. This is a potentially useful data point for brands in healthcare, insurance, senior living or any category targeting older female consumers.

34. Users spend an average of 19 minutes daily using Messenger

The average Messenger user spends 19 minutes a day in the app, again according to DataReportal. That’s a decent chunk of daily attention, and it represents time spent in a private, high-intent context—not passively scrolling a feed. Brands leveraging Messenger for direct outreach, automated sequences or customer support are tapping into focused attention time.

35. Nearly 56% of Facebook Messenger users identify as male

Messenger’s user base skews slightly male at 55.8%, similar to Facebook’s global audience. For brands running Messenger-based campaigns (e.g., chatbots, direct outreach or lead generation flows) this gender split is worth factoring into targeting and creative decisions.

Statista's chart showing the gender split of Facebook Messenger's global audience.

Facebook influencer statistics

Influencer marketing on Facebook doesn’t get the same attention as Instagram or TikTok, but the data tells a more interesting story.

These stats cover which demographics engage with influencers on Facebook and how marketers and creators are shifting their platform priorities.

36. About 50% of Baby Boomers are most likely to engage with influencers on Facebook

Facebook is where older audiences actually pay attention to influencer content. Sprout Social’s State of Influencer Marketing Report shows half of Baby Boomers say Facebook is the platform where they’re most likely to engage with influencers—a number that dwarfs any other platform for that demographic.

If your brand targets 55+ consumers, running influencer campaigns on Instagram or TikTok alone means you’re probably missing your highest-intent audience entirely.

37. Both marketers and creators plan to use Facebook less for influencer marketing in 2026

There’s a growing disconnect between Facebook’s audience potential and where marketers are actually headed. Around 28% of marketers plan to use Facebook the least for influencer marketing this year, compared to just 17% who plan to prioritize it.

The creator side mirrors this: 29% of creators plan to use Facebook the least, versus 24% who’ll lean into it. The platform is losing mindshare on both sides of the equation simultaneously.

38. Only 28.4% of marketers prefer using Facebook for influencer campaigns

Facebook ranks well behind Instagram, TikTok and YouTube when it comes to influencer platform preference. Less than a third of marketers choose it for influencer campaigns.

Influencer Marketing Hub's chart showing marketers' preferred channels for influencer marketing in 2025.

That said, the brands that do use it tend to lean on Facebook for community-driven and niche professional audiences. These are segments where Facebook Groups and longer-form content formats give it an edge other platforms can’t easily replicate.

39. Facebook generated an estimated $1.19 billion in US influencer marketing revenue from sponsored content in 2025

While platforms like YouTube and Instagram dominate influencer spending, Facebook still commands a significant share of the creator economy. The platform’s large audience and strong ad infrastructure make it especially useful for brands that want to amplify influencer content through paid campaigns, extending reach beyond the creator’s organic audience.

How do these Facebook stats inform your social media strategy?

These stats help marketers understand how big the opportunity on Facebook is, what engagement and performance realistically looks like and why it’s still worth investing in the platform for both reach and conversions.

Whether you’re running influencer campaigns, advertising products or using Messenger for customer support, understanding the latest Facebook trends and data is crucial. The platform still works, but only if your approach matches how people actually use it today.

Ready to put these insights into action? Explore these Facebook marketing tools to manage, measure and optimize your strategy.

The post 39 Facebook statistics marketers should know in 2026 appeared first on Sprout Social.



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