Like many others in remodeling marketing, I used to default to the same advice: post consistently on social media. Show your work. Build an audience. Stay active, and the leads will follow.
You may think you already know why I don’t give that advice anymore – but this post will take you through four specific reasons why I stopped, and what I recommend instead.
Please read to the end to discover what actually fills a remodeling business’s calendar in 2026. In the process, you may find an approach that finally makes social media feel worth your time.
Background: Social Media and My Remodeling Marketing Clients
Let’s go back a few years to when “post every day” became the universal advice for local service businesses.
I was working with remodeling contractors on their paid advertising, and in every conversation, the topic of social media came up. The advice everywhere – from marketing blogs to YouTube coaches to agency consultants – was the same: you need to post consistently. Show your projects. Build your following. Stay top of mind.
I watched contractors take that advice seriously. They posted before-and-after photos. They hired photographers. They planned content calendars. They stayed consistent for months.
Fast forward to reviewing their results – and the question I kept asking was the same one: how much of your social media effort turned into booked consultations?
Almost always, the answer was: not much.
Here’s why.
4 Reasons I Don’t Tell Remodelers to Post Every Day Anymore
Reason #1. The Data on How Homeowners Find Contractors Tells a Different Story
Sorry to start with research, but when you understand how homeowners actually find remodeling businesses, you can’t keep pretending daily posts are moving the needle.
According to Uberall’s 2025 local search report, 77.6% of consumers use Google Search to find local businesses, and 51.4% use Google Maps. Social media accounts for 34.4% – and that number includes passive browsing, not active searches for a contractor.
The BrightLocal Consumer Search Behavior report reinforces this: when it comes to local search specifically, only 14% of consumers use social media as their default discovery method. 45% default to Google, with another 8% using Safari (which also runs on Google).
In other words, when a homeowner decides they want a kitchen renovation, they open Google. The social media posts you spent Sunday afternoon creating are not what they find.
Reason #2. Organic Reach Has Made Daily Posting a Bad Investment of Your Time
When I first started working in digital marketing, posting on a Facebook business page actually reached your followers. That era is over.
According to Sprout Social’s 2026 Facebook statistics report, the average engagement rate across Facebook business posts is now 0.15%. That means for every 1,000 followers, a typical post is engaging about 1.5 people.
For a remodeling business with a few hundred followers – which is most local contractors – the math is bleak. You spend time creating a post, and it reaches a fraction of the people who already follow you, let alone anyone new.
Although I understand the appeal of free organic reach, it has declined to a point where daily posting as a primary strategy no longer makes financial sense for a local service business with limited time.
Freebie Time: If you want a complete checklist of what a remodeling marketing system should include – social, paid, and organic – you can book a free discovery call at bad2badass.com and I’ll walk through it with you.
Reason #3. The Time Cost Is Real, and the Results Aren’t Proportional
This one comes down to simple math, and honestly, the frustration I’ve seen from remodeling business owners who followed the conventional advice faithfully.
Researching content ideas, filming project walkthroughs, writing captions, editing photos, scheduling posts – done properly for seven days a week, social media content becomes a part-time job. For a solo operator or small team already running projects, doing estimates, and managing subcontractors, that time has a significant opportunity cost.
I’ve seen contractors who were burned out on marketing not because marketing doesn’t work, but because they poured their energy into a channel that wasn’t producing a return proportional to their effort.
Now that I work with remodeling businesses on their full marketing strategy, I see consistently that the time previously spent on daily posting produces far better results when redirected toward the tactics in the next section.
Reason #4. Social Media Plays a Different Role Than Most People Assign to It
Here’s the reason that changed how I advise remodeling businesses on this entirely.
Social media is not where homeowners find remodelers – it’s where they validate them. According to BrightLocal’s 2026 Local Consumer Review Survey, 24% of consumers visit a business’s social media channels during their research process. Not to discover the business. To check on it after finding it somewhere else.
That’s the real job social media does for a remodeling business: it answers the question “Is this company legit?” for someone who already found you on Google. That’s a valuable job. It’s just not the job of generating cold leads, which is what daily posting is usually meant to accomplish.
What I Do Instead of the Post-Every-Day Approach
As I mentioned, I now recommend a different social media strategy for remodeling businesses – one that takes less time and aligns with what the channel actually does well.
This works better because:
- It focuses effort on the content types that influence homeowners already evaluating your business, rather than trying to generate cold discovery
- It frees up time to invest in channels that do generate new leads at volume – primarily Google Search and paid ads
- It eliminates the burnout cycle of creating content that doesn’t convert
Here’s the framework:
Post 2-3 times per week, not every day. Consistency still matters for the validation role. An active page with recent photos signals a legitimate, ongoing business. But “active” does not require daily posting.
Post proof, not personality. The content types that do the most work for a remodeling business: before-and-after photos, customer testimonials, work-in-progress shots, and short project recaps. These are what homeowners look for when they’re vetting you.
Use paid Facebook and Instagram ads for actual lead generation. This is where the channel earns its place in a lead generation system. Retargeting ads – which show your work to people who already visited your website – convert warm prospects at a fraction of the cost of cold advertising. A small daily budget ($5-$15) is often enough to maintain consistent visibility with your warm audience.
My client, Chris, describes the shift well:
“I used to spend my weekends planning social content and wondering why my phone wasn’t ringing. Now I post a few project photos a week, run a retargeting ad in the background, and I’m getting calls from people who already looked at my website and came back.”
That’s a Wrap!
In summary, I stopped recommending daily social media posting for remodeling businesses because the data shows homeowners use Google – not social media – to find contractors, organic reach has declined to the point where daily posts reach very few people, and the time investment doesn’t produce results proportional to the effort.
What works instead: consistent proof-based posting 2-3 times per week to support the validation role social media genuinely plays, paired with paid retargeting ads to generate actual leads from warm traffic.
If you want to build a marketing system where every channel is doing its actual job – and none of your time is wasted on tactics that don’t convert – I’d be happy to walk through it with you.
Book a free discovery call at bad2badass.com, and we’ll look at what’s working, what isn’t, and what a focused strategy for your remodeling business would look like.
Do you have any questions? Reach out on LinkedIn, and I’ll answer to the best of my ability.
You may also want to read how to get remodeling leads online for the full picture of where qualified leads actually come from for remodeling businesses.
