Guide — Social

The Minimum Viable Social Presence for a Busy Contractor

You don't need to become an influencer to win work in Virginia. You need a small, honest social presence a homeowner can find, trust, and act on — and that you can keep up in about half an hour a week.

/ The short answer

The minimum viable social presence for a contractor is one active platform (usually Facebook), your Google Business Profile treated like social, and a simple habit: post a few job photos a week with a short caption and the town you worked in. Skip everything else until that's consistent. Most contractors can run this in about 30 minutes a week.

What "minimum viable" actually means for a contractor

Social media for contractors gets sold two ways, and both are wrong for a working crew. One camp says you need to be everywhere — Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, LinkedIn — posting daily. The other camp says social is a waste of time and you should skip it entirely. Neither holds up.

The honest middle is a minimum viable presence: the smallest amount of activity that still does the three jobs it needs to do.

Notice what's not on that list: going viral, chasing followers, or entertaining strangers. You're not building an audience of fans. You're building a small body of proof that the right local homeowner runs into at the moment they need you. That's a smaller, more achievable target — and it's the whole point of this guide. Everything below is built around doing those three jobs and nothing else.

Pick one platform — for most Virginia contractors, that's Facebook

The single biggest mistake is spreading thin across five apps and keeping none of them alive. A half-dead page on four platforms reads worse than a single active one, because it looks like you started and gave up. Minimum viable means one platform, done consistently. For most residential contractors in Virginia, that platform is Facebook.

A few reasons that hold up:

Instagram is a fine second platform if your work is visually striking — custom decks, stonework, high-end remodels, landscaping. But it's a second, not a first. If you can only keep one plate spinning, make it Facebook, and add anything else only after the first habit has held for a couple of months. A single well-run page beats five neglected ones every time — that's the core idea behind our social media marketing work: one channel, done right, before you touch a second.

Treat your Google Business Profile as social platform #1a

Most contractors think of their Google Business Profile as a directory listing you set up once and forget. That's a mistake. For local service work, your profile is arguably a more useful social channel than any app — and it costs almost no extra effort once you're already snapping job photos.

Google lets you post updates, add photos, and answer questions right on your profile. Those actions do two things at once. First, they show a homeowner comparing three contractors that you're the one who's active and paying attention. Second, fresh photos and posts are one of the signals Google weighs when it decides who shows up in the local map results — the pack of three businesses that appears when someone searches "deck builder near me" or "HVAC repair Roanoke."

The minimum here is simple: every time you post a job photo to Facebook, add the same photo to your Google profile. Same photo, same caption, thirty extra seconds. Once a month, post a short update about a recent project or a seasonal reminder — gutter cleaning before winter, AC checks before summer. That's it.

If you want the deeper mechanics — categories, service areas, review strategy — that's the world of local SEO and Google Business Profile optimization, and it's worth doing well. But even the bare-minimum version of "post the photo twice" puts you ahead of most competitors, whose profiles sit untouched from the day they were set up.

The only content you need: your actual work

You don't need a content strategy, a calendar of themes, or trending audio. The best content for a contractor is the most boring to produce: photos of jobs you're already doing.

Get in the habit of taking three shots on every job — a before, a during, and an after. It costs you fifteen seconds and hands you a finished post. A clean before-and-after outperforms anything clever you could write. Rotate through a few simple formats so you're never staring at a blank caption:

Always name the town in the caption — Roanoke, Salem, Blacksburg, Hillsville, wherever the job was. It tells the reader, and the algorithm, exactly where you work, which is the whole game in social media for contractors. Skip the sales language. "Call for a free quote" on every post reads as desperate. Let the work do the selling, and put the phone number in your profile, not in every caption. If someone wants you, they'll find the button.

The 30-minute-a-week system that survives a busy season

A plan you can't keep isn't a plan. Most contractor pages die the same way: the owner tries to post daily, misses a week during a busy stretch, feels behind, and quits. Minimum viable is built to survive your busiest month, not your slowest.

Here's the whole system:

A few rules that keep it sustainable:

If even 30 minutes a week is too much during peak season, that's the point where handing it off starts to make sense — but prove the habit works first, so you know exactly what you're paying someone to do.

What to ignore (so you don't burn out)

Half of a good minimum viable presence is knowing what to skip. Here's what a busy contractor can safely ignore, at least until the basics run on their own:

One thing you should not ignore: reviews and messages. A bad review left unanswered, or a lead message that sits for a week, does more damage than a hundred missed posts. Social and reputation management are two sides of the same coin — being findable is worthless if what people find, or the silence they hit, sends them to the next contractor on the list.

When to level up (and when not to)

The minimum viable presence is a floor, not a ceiling. Once you've run the 30-minute system for two or three months and it's genuinely automatic, you've earned the right to add more — if the math works.

Signs you're ready to level up:

Reasonable next steps, roughly in order: add Instagram if your work is visual; boost your best before-and-after posts to a tight local radius for a few dollars a day; or pair social with stronger local SEO so the homeowners who find you on Facebook also find you on Google. That last one is usually a bigger lever than any single social tactic.

And the honest opposite: if you've run the minimum for a season and it still feels like a grind that isn't paying off, that's a real answer too. Not every contractor needs a heavy social presence. A strong website, solid reviews, and a well-run Google profile can carry a lot of the load on their own. Social is one lever among several, not a mandate. The right move is the one you'll actually keep up — or the one worth paying someone to run. If you want a straight answer on which that is for your business, we'll lay it out in a written proposal with the scope and cost spelled out, no pressure to buy.

Key takeaways

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/ Common questions

Quick answers.

Which social media platform should a contractor use first?
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For most residential contractors in Virginia, start with Facebook. It skews toward the older homeowners who own the property you want to work on, it doubles as a referral engine through local groups, and a phone photo with two sentences is a complete post. Add Instagram or anything else only after Facebook has been consistent for a couple of months.
How often does a contractor really need to post on social media?
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Three or four posts a week is plenty, and even that isn't sacred. Consistency over months matters far more than daily volume. A page that posts a good job photo every few days for a year beats one that posted hard for a month and then went silent. Missing an occasional week during a busy stretch won't hurt you — quitting will.
What should a contractor actually post about?
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Your real jobs. Take a before, during, and after photo on every job, then post the best ones with one short line and the town name: "Rotted deck to new composite in Christiansburg." Rotate in the occasional quick tip and a crew photo a few times a year. Skip trends, skip a sales pitch on every post, and skip anything that isn't your actual work.
Is social media even worth it for a small contractor?
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For most, yes — but only as one lever among several. A small, active presence proves you're real, keeps you top of mind for referrals, and feeds photos into your Google Business Profile. That said, if you run the minimum for a season and it feels like a grind that isn't paying off, a strong website, solid reviews, and a well-run Google profile can carry much of the load instead. The right move is the one you'll actually keep up.
Should I pay someone to run my contractor social media?
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Prove the habit works first, so you know what you're paying for. If even 30 minutes a week is impossible during peak season, or you want to grow faster than the minimum allows, handing it off makes sense. A good partner mirrors your job photos across Facebook and Google, replies to messages quickly, and ties social to your local SEO. Ask for a written proposal so the scope and cost are clear up front.
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