Blog

  • 11 of the Best Social Media Campaign Examples (+ Key Takeaways for Your Strategy)

    11 of the Best Social Media Campaign Examples (+ Key Takeaways for Your Strategy)

    Real-life social media campaign examples from trailblazing brands to inspire your next big project. LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Think you know which social platform has the most engagement? The data might surprise you.

    Social media trends are always evolving, but lately, engagement has been shifting in unexpected ways. LinkedIn is seeing record-high interactions, Pinterest is quietly on the rise, and Threads — once a breakout success — is settling into more stable patterns. Meanwhile, Instagram’s engagement is lower than ever, but that doesn’t mean it’s losing relevance.

    If you’ve ever felt like social media engagement is unpredictable, you’re not alone. But while platforms and algorithms change, one thing remains the same: understanding the data gives you an edge.

    At Buffer, we analyzed millions of posts across LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, X, Threads, and Pinterest to uncover where engagement is thriving, slowing down, and what it all means for your content strategy.

    Here’s what we found:

    • Which platforms have the highest and lowest engagement rates this year
    • How audience behavior is shifting across social media
    • What’s behind LinkedIn’s engagement surge and Instagram’s engagement dip
    • How to adjust your content strategy based on 2025’s engagement trends

    If you want to stay ahead of the curve and make smarter content decisions, this article has the insights you need.

    Let’s dive in.

    What is engagement rate and why does it matter?

    Engagement rate is one of the most important social media metrics — but it’s also one of the most misunderstood.

    At its core, engagement rate measures how much people interact with your content relative to how many people see it. It’s not just about visibility — it’s about connection.

    For example:

    • A post that reaches 10,000 people but gets only a few likes? Low engagement.
    • A post that reaches 1,000 people but sparks hundreds of interactions? High engagement.

    That’s why engagement rate is one of the strongest indicators of content performance. It tells you:

    • How well your content connects with your audience.
    • How likely your content is to be amplified by the platform’s algorithm.
    • Whether your audience is passive or actively engaging.

    The key considerations about engagement rate data

    Before we dive into the rankings, here are some key considerations to reflect the nuance of this report:

    • Engagement rate ≠ Total engagement volume. Platforms with massive reach — like Instagram — may have lower engagement rates but still drive more total interactions than smaller, higher-engagement platforms like LinkedIn. A 1% engagement rate on Instagram could mean thousands of interactions, while a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn might result in far fewer total engagements.
    • Each platform encourages different behaviors. LinkedIn prioritizes comments and discussions, while Instagram thrives on shares and saves. These behavioral differences mean a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn doesn’t equate to a 6% engagement rate on TikTok.
    • What counts as engagement varies by platform. Saves on Instagram, pins on Pinterest, and comments on YouTube all count as engagement, but they reflect different user behaviors and levels of intent.
    • Not all engagement is public. Private interactions — like bookmarks, DMs, and link clicks — aren’t always reflected in engagement rate calculations.

    How we calculate engagement rate

    At Buffer, we calculate engagement rate using the following formula:

    (Total Interactions / Total Impressions) × 100 = Engagement Rate (%)

    To provide the most accurate view of engagement trends, we analyze engagement rates in two ways:

    • Averages which help us compare platforms at a high level—showing where engagement is strongest overall.
    • Medians over time which reveal the story of how engagement is evolving month by month.

    Now that we understand what engagement rate really measures — and its nuances across platforms — let’s get into the rankings.

    Average engagement rates by platform: Who’s leading the engagement game?

    To determine where users are engaging the most, we analyzed average engagement rates across eight major social platforms over a one-year timeframe. Here’s how they stack up:

    Platform Average Engagement Rate (%)
    LinkedIn 6.50% 📈
    Facebook 5.07%
    TikTok 4.86%
    Threads 4.51%
    YouTube 4.41%
    Pinterest 3.46%
    X (Twitter) 2.31%
    Instagram 1.16%

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    At first glance, the average engagement rates across these platforms tell us a few key things:

    • LinkedIn is the top performer. With a median engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn has outpaced all other platforms
    • Facebook engagement remains steady. At 5.07%, Facebook continues to generate strong engagement
    • TikTok ranks higher than YouTube for engagement. With 4.86%, TikTok remains a leader for short-form video, with YouTube not far behind with 4.41%
    • Threads has outpaced X/Twitter in engagement. Threads’ 4.51% engagement rate is significantly higher than X’s 2.31%
    • Instagram’s engagement rate is the lowest. At 1.16%, Instagram’s engagement is significantly lower than other platforms, though private interactions (DMs, saves) likely contribute to hidden engagement that isn’t captured in public metrics.

    Now, while these median numbers provide a broad comparison of which platforms drive the most engagement overall, they don’t capture how engagement has shifted over time.

    To understand how engagement is evolving, we decided to look at median engagement rates over the year between January 2024 to January 2025.

    Engagement patterns between January 2024 to January 2025

    Engagement rates don’t exist in a vacuum. User behavior, algorithm changes, and broader industry shifts all influence how people interact with content.

    While the overall median engagement rates tell us which platforms perform best overall, the median engagement rates over time reveal how engagement is changing month by month.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Here’s what we found from analyzing median engagement rates from January 2024 to January 2025.

    1. LinkedIn’s engagement is steadily rising

    With an average engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn leads all platforms, but the real story is its growth over time.

    In January 2024, LinkedIn’s median engagement rate was 6.00%. By January 2025, it had risen to 8.01%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What could be driving this increase?

    • Less content saturation = higher visibility. Only 1% of LinkedIn users post regularly, meaning content has less competition and more potential reach.
    • The algorithm rewards conversations. Posts with early engagement are boosted to second- and third-degree connections, expanding visibility.
    • More diverse content formats are succeeding. Carousels see significant engagement, and the platform just introduced video.

    LinkedIn remains the strongest platform for authority-building and organic reach. If you’ve been posting inconsistently, now is the time to lean in.

    2. Instagram’s engagement is evolving

    While Instagram has the lowest average engagement rate (1.16%), its interaction patterns are shifting rather than simply declining.

    In January 2024, Instagram’s median engagement rate was 2.94%. By January 2025, it had adjusted to 0.61%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    This change reflects a broader shift in how users engage with content rather than a loss of platform relevance. What’s behind the shift?

    • More content is being consumed than ever. With reels and stories dominating, users are watching more but interacting differently — passive engagement is rising, even if likes and comments aren’t as visible.
    • Engagement is becoming more private. Saves, DMs, and shares are increasing, but these interactions don’t contribute to public engagement metrics.
    • Reels success depends on depth, not just views. High-performing reels tend to spark conversation or encourage sharing, while others may generate views without direct engagement.

    Instagram engagement isn’t disappearing — it’s moving behind the scenes. Create saveable content for the algorithm, share your posts with friends, and reply via DM — that’s where real engagement is happening.

    3. Threads’ engagement is stabilizing after an initial surge

    Threads launched with high engagement, but its numbers have steadily declined from 4.76% in February 2024 to 3.60% in February 2025. While Threads still outperforms X/Twitter in engagement rate, its growth phase has leveled out.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • The early adopter effect is fading. When Threads launched, engagement was high as users explored the platform. As more users join, engagement is now spreading out across a larger content pool.
    • More content = more competition. Initially, with fewer users posting, content was more visible. Now, as more creators share content, engagement is becoming more distributed.
    • **Algorithm shifts are influencing visibility.** Threads started with a purely chronological feed, but Meta has since introduced ranking signals, making engagement less predictable.

    Threads remains a high-engagement platform, but success now depends on participation, not just presence. Prioritizing conversations, real-time engagement, and interactive content will help sustain engagement as the platform matures.

    💡
    We only started collecting engagement data from Threads in February 2024.

    4. TikTok engagement remains high, but patterns are changing

    With an average engagement rate of 4.86%, TikTok is still one of the strongest platforms for engagement, but its median engagement rate has gradually declined from 5.14% in January 2024 to 4.56% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • TikTok’s algorithm is rewarding retention over interactions.** Watch time and replays are now bigger engagement drivers than likes or comments, shifting what “high engagement” looks like on the platform. Pro tip: Keep your videos above 1-minute as we’ve found that longer TikToks perform better in the algorithm.
    • Short-form video competition is increasing. With Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and even LinkedIn embracing video, TikTok is no longer the only dominant player in the space.
    • More brands and advertisers = more polished content. TikTok’s early success was built on authentic, unpolished content, but as brands ramp up their presence, engagement rates have become less predictable.

    TikTok is still a powerhouse for engagement, but the type of engagement that matters is shifting. Focus on content that drives watch time and shares, not just likes and comments.

    5. YouTube Shorts engagement is catching up to TikTok

    YouTube Shorts’ 4.41% average engagement rate puts it just behind TikTok, but its median engagement rate has risen from 3.95% in January 2024 to 4.71% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the increase?

    • YouTube’s search advantage. Unlike TikTok, YouTube content is discoverable long after posting, meaning shorts have a longer engagement lifespan than TikTok videos.
    • Higher audience intent. YouTube users are actively searching for content, while TikTok users are passively scrolling, leading to more engaged viewers on shorts.
    • Monetization is attracting creators. With more ad revenue opportunities, creators are investing more in shorts content, leading to higher-quality videos that retain engagement.

    YouTube Shorts is becoming a major competitor to TikTok for short-form video. If you’re already creating vertical video content, repurposing it for shorts could extend its lifespan and reach.

    6. Pinterest’s engagement is quietly rising

    Pinterest engagement has grown from 3.08% in January 2024 to 5.26% in January 2025, making it one of the strongest platforms for long-term engagement.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Pinterest growing?

    • It’s a search-driven platform, not a feed-based one. Unlike TikTok or Instagram, Pinterest users actively seek out content, meaning engagement is more intentional than passive scrolling.
    • Pins have a long shelf life. A single Pin can generate engagement for months or even years, unlike Instagram posts that disappear quickly.
    • More users are treating Pinterest like a search engine. As Google’s search algorithms shift, more users are turning to Pinterest for inspiration and discovery.

    If you create evergreen content — such as guides, tutorials, and infographics — Pinterest offers long-term engagement potential. Unlike other platforms where content fades quickly, your content on Pinterest can drive engagement long after you post it.

    7. Facebook’s engagement remains steady despite changes

    Facebook’s 5.07% average engagement rate is strong, and its median engagement rate has remained stable at around 5.45% over the past year.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Facebook engagement holding steady?

    • Facebook Groups continue to drive strong engagement. Unlike brand pages, niche Groups see some of the highest interaction rates on the platform.
    • Meta is investing in new monetization tools. Features like subscriptions, Facebook reels monetization, and ad revenue sharing are keeping creators active.
    • Facebook’s demographic is highly engaged. While younger audiences gravitate toward TikTok and Instagram, Facebook’s core user base (ages 30+) remains actively engaged.

    Facebook remains a high-value platform for community-driven engagement — especially if you leverage Groups and interactive content.

    8. X/Twitter engagement continues to decline

    X (formerly Twitter) has dropped from 3.47% in January 2024 to 2.15% in January 2025, making it the second-lowest platform for engagement after Instagram.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the decline?

    • Algorithm changes have reduced organic reach.** X is prioritizing paid subscribers and recommended content, making organic engagement harder to achieve.
    • More users are lurking rather than engaging. Many users consume content without liking, commenting, or reposting, leading to lower engagement rates.
    • Platform instability is affecting creator investment. With frequent policy shifts and monetization changes, fewer creators are prioritizing X.

    Unless you’re focused on news, politics, or real-time commentary, engagement on X will require more effort and consistency to maintain.

    What the data means for your content strategy

    Knowing where engagement is highest is one thing — figuring out how to use that insight in your strategy is another.

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically make a platform the best fit for you. The key question is: What are your goals, and which platform aligns with them?

    Here’s how to refine your approach based on the data.

    1. Pick the platform that aligns with your goals

    Not all engagement is equal, and different platforms serve different purposes. Here's how you can adjust based on what you're trying to achieve:

    • For high engagement per post: Focus on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Pinterest. LinkedIn and Facebook have strong engagement through comments and community-driven content. Pinterest excels at evergreen content, driving steady engagement long after posting.
    • For massive reach potential: Go with Instagram and TikTok. While Instagram’s engagement rate may be lower, it offers vast reach, and TikTok’s discovery algorithm allows even smaller accounts to go viral.
    • For video-focused engagement: TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the best platforms. Short-form video drives some of the highest engagement rates, and repurposing video across platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Instagram) can boost your reach without extra work.
    • For real-time conversations: If your goal is immediate interactions, go with Threads or X (Twitter). Both excel in real-time discussions, with Threads gaining traction for organic engagement and X still being key for news-driven content.

    Takeaway: Instead of trying to be everywhere, focus on the platforms that align with your specific goals. Don’t just chase high engagement rates — consider how each platform fits your content objectives.

    2. Adapt your content format for each platform

    Each platform prioritizes different formats based on user behavior. Here’s how you can tailor your content:

    • LinkedIn is about conversation starters. Use long-form posts, carousels, and documents to encourage discussions and showcase expertise.
    • Instagram’s engagement is increasingly happening behind the scenes — so focus on Reels that generate saves and shares, not just likes.
    • TikTok favors content that keeps people watching. Go for quick hooks and engaging narratives that are visually compelling from the start.
    • Pinterest excels with evergreen content that gets better over time. High-quality visuals, step-by-step guides, and search-optimized content will perform best here.

    Takeaway: Tailor your content to the platform—what works on Instagram doesn’t necessarily work on LinkedIn. Focus on creating platform-first content that aligns with user expectations and engagement behaviors.

    3. Fine-tune your posting strategy for maximum engagement

    Engagement isn’t just about what you post — it’s about when and how often you post. Each platform rewards different posting behaviors, so optimizing your frequency is key.

    • For LinkedIn and Facebook: Focus on quality over quantity. Posts that sustain engagement over time tend to do better, so one well-crafted post a few times a week can be enough.
    • For Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts: These platforms thrive on frequency. Post daily to increase visibility and maintain engagement, but always prioritize quality content that resonates with your audience.
    • For Threads and X: Engage in real-time conversations — post multiple times a day if possible, but engage actively with others’ content to build a community.

    Takeaway: Match your posting frequency to the platform’s algorithm. Some platforms reward quality posts over consistency (LinkedIn, Facebook), while others, like TikTok and Instagram, reward daily posts that build momentum.

    Play to the strengths of each platform

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically mean a platform is the right fit for you. What matters most is how well a platform aligns with your goals — whether that’s visibility, deep engagement, video performance, or real-time interaction.

    Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, focus on the platforms that play to your strengths and audience behaviors. Adapt your content format, posting strategy, and engagement approach to work with the strengths of each platform rather than against them.

  • How to Edit TikTok Videos: Tips to Create Content That Stops The Scroll

    How to Edit TikTok Videos: Tips to Create Content That Stops The Scroll

    Here’s how to edit TikTok videos and tips for making your next video the best yet.LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Think you know which social platform has the most engagement? The data might surprise you.

    Social media trends are always evolving, but lately, engagement has been shifting in unexpected ways. LinkedIn is seeing record-high interactions, Pinterest is quietly on the rise, and Threads — once a breakout success — is settling into more stable patterns. Meanwhile, Instagram’s engagement is lower than ever, but that doesn’t mean it’s losing relevance.

    If you’ve ever felt like social media engagement is unpredictable, you’re not alone. But while platforms and algorithms change, one thing remains the same: understanding the data gives you an edge.

    At Buffer, we analyzed millions of posts across LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, X, Threads, and Pinterest to uncover where engagement is thriving, slowing down, and what it all means for your content strategy.

    Here’s what we found:

    • Which platforms have the highest and lowest engagement rates this year
    • How audience behavior is shifting across social media
    • What’s behind LinkedIn’s engagement surge and Instagram’s engagement dip
    • How to adjust your content strategy based on 2025’s engagement trends

    If you want to stay ahead of the curve and make smarter content decisions, this article has the insights you need.

    Let’s dive in.

    What is engagement rate and why does it matter?

    Engagement rate is one of the most important social media metrics — but it’s also one of the most misunderstood.

    At its core, engagement rate measures how much people interact with your content relative to how many people see it. It’s not just about visibility — it’s about connection.

    For example:

    • A post that reaches 10,000 people but gets only a few likes? Low engagement.
    • A post that reaches 1,000 people but sparks hundreds of interactions? High engagement.

    That’s why engagement rate is one of the strongest indicators of content performance. It tells you:

    • How well your content connects with your audience.
    • How likely your content is to be amplified by the platform’s algorithm.
    • Whether your audience is passive or actively engaging.

    The key considerations about engagement rate data

    Before we dive into the rankings, here are some key considerations to reflect the nuance of this report:

    • Engagement rate ≠ Total engagement volume. Platforms with massive reach — like Instagram — may have lower engagement rates but still drive more total interactions than smaller, higher-engagement platforms like LinkedIn. A 1% engagement rate on Instagram could mean thousands of interactions, while a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn might result in far fewer total engagements.
    • Each platform encourages different behaviors. LinkedIn prioritizes comments and discussions, while Instagram thrives on shares and saves. These behavioral differences mean a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn doesn’t equate to a 6% engagement rate on TikTok.
    • What counts as engagement varies by platform. Saves on Instagram, pins on Pinterest, and comments on YouTube all count as engagement, but they reflect different user behaviors and levels of intent.
    • Not all engagement is public. Private interactions — like bookmarks, DMs, and link clicks — aren’t always reflected in engagement rate calculations.

    How we calculate engagement rate

    At Buffer, we calculate engagement rate using the following formula:

    (Total Interactions / Total Impressions) × 100 = Engagement Rate (%)

    To provide the most accurate view of engagement trends, we analyze engagement rates in two ways:

    • Averages which help us compare platforms at a high level—showing where engagement is strongest overall.
    • Medians over time which reveal the story of how engagement is evolving month by month.

    Now that we understand what engagement rate really measures — and its nuances across platforms — let’s get into the rankings.

    Average engagement rates by platform: Who’s leading the engagement game?

    To determine where users are engaging the most, we analyzed average engagement rates across eight major social platforms over a one-year timeframe. Here’s how they stack up:

    Platform Average Engagement Rate (%)
    LinkedIn 6.50% 📈
    Facebook 5.07%
    TikTok 4.86%
    Threads 4.51%
    YouTube 4.41%
    Pinterest 3.46%
    X (Twitter) 2.31%
    Instagram 1.16%

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    At first glance, the average engagement rates across these platforms tell us a few key things:

    • LinkedIn is the top performer. With a median engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn has outpaced all other platforms
    • Facebook engagement remains steady. At 5.07%, Facebook continues to generate strong engagement
    • TikTok ranks higher than YouTube for engagement. With 4.86%, TikTok remains a leader for short-form video, with YouTube not far behind with 4.41%
    • Threads has outpaced X/Twitter in engagement. Threads’ 4.51% engagement rate is significantly higher than X’s 2.31%
    • Instagram’s engagement rate is the lowest. At 1.16%, Instagram’s engagement is significantly lower than other platforms, though private interactions (DMs, saves) likely contribute to hidden engagement that isn’t captured in public metrics.

    Now, while these median numbers provide a broad comparison of which platforms drive the most engagement overall, they don’t capture how engagement has shifted over time.

    To understand how engagement is evolving, we decided to look at median engagement rates over the year between January 2024 to January 2025.

    Engagement patterns between January 2024 to January 2025

    Engagement rates don’t exist in a vacuum. User behavior, algorithm changes, and broader industry shifts all influence how people interact with content.

    While the overall median engagement rates tell us which platforms perform best overall, the median engagement rates over time reveal how engagement is changing month by month.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Here’s what we found from analyzing median engagement rates from January 2024 to January 2025.

    1. LinkedIn’s engagement is steadily rising

    With an average engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn leads all platforms, but the real story is its growth over time.

    In January 2024, LinkedIn’s median engagement rate was 6.00%. By January 2025, it had risen to 8.01%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What could be driving this increase?

    • Less content saturation = higher visibility. Only 1% of LinkedIn users post regularly, meaning content has less competition and more potential reach.
    • The algorithm rewards conversations. Posts with early engagement are boosted to second- and third-degree connections, expanding visibility.
    • More diverse content formats are succeeding. Carousels see significant engagement, and the platform just introduced video.

    LinkedIn remains the strongest platform for authority-building and organic reach. If you’ve been posting inconsistently, now is the time to lean in.

    2. Instagram’s engagement is evolving

    While Instagram has the lowest average engagement rate (1.16%), its interaction patterns are shifting rather than simply declining.

    In January 2024, Instagram’s median engagement rate was 2.94%. By January 2025, it had adjusted to 0.61%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    This change reflects a broader shift in how users engage with content rather than a loss of platform relevance. What’s behind the shift?

    • More content is being consumed than ever. With reels and stories dominating, users are watching more but interacting differently — passive engagement is rising, even if likes and comments aren’t as visible.
    • Engagement is becoming more private. Saves, DMs, and shares are increasing, but these interactions don’t contribute to public engagement metrics.
    • Reels success depends on depth, not just views. High-performing reels tend to spark conversation or encourage sharing, while others may generate views without direct engagement.

    Instagram engagement isn’t disappearing — it’s moving behind the scenes. Create saveable content for the algorithm, share your posts with friends, and reply via DM — that’s where real engagement is happening.

    3. Threads’ engagement is stabilizing after an initial surge

    Threads launched with high engagement, but its numbers have steadily declined from 4.76% in February 2024 to 3.60% in February 2025. While Threads still outperforms X/Twitter in engagement rate, its growth phase has leveled out.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • The early adopter effect is fading. When Threads launched, engagement was high as users explored the platform. As more users join, engagement is now spreading out across a larger content pool.
    • More content = more competition. Initially, with fewer users posting, content was more visible. Now, as more creators share content, engagement is becoming more distributed.
    • **Algorithm shifts are influencing visibility.** Threads started with a purely chronological feed, but Meta has since introduced ranking signals, making engagement less predictable.

    Threads remains a high-engagement platform, but success now depends on participation, not just presence. Prioritizing conversations, real-time engagement, and interactive content will help sustain engagement as the platform matures.

    💡
    We only started collecting engagement data from Threads in February 2024.

    4. TikTok engagement remains high, but patterns are changing

    With an average engagement rate of 4.86%, TikTok is still one of the strongest platforms for engagement, but its median engagement rate has gradually declined from 5.14% in January 2024 to 4.56% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • TikTok’s algorithm is rewarding retention over interactions.** Watch time and replays are now bigger engagement drivers than likes or comments, shifting what “high engagement” looks like on the platform. Pro tip: Keep your videos above 1-minute as we’ve found that longer TikToks perform better in the algorithm.
    • Short-form video competition is increasing. With Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and even LinkedIn embracing video, TikTok is no longer the only dominant player in the space.
    • More brands and advertisers = more polished content. TikTok’s early success was built on authentic, unpolished content, but as brands ramp up their presence, engagement rates have become less predictable.

    TikTok is still a powerhouse for engagement, but the type of engagement that matters is shifting. Focus on content that drives watch time and shares, not just likes and comments.

    5. YouTube Shorts engagement is catching up to TikTok

    YouTube Shorts’ 4.41% average engagement rate puts it just behind TikTok, but its median engagement rate has risen from 3.95% in January 2024 to 4.71% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the increase?

    • YouTube’s search advantage. Unlike TikTok, YouTube content is discoverable long after posting, meaning shorts have a longer engagement lifespan than TikTok videos.
    • Higher audience intent. YouTube users are actively searching for content, while TikTok users are passively scrolling, leading to more engaged viewers on shorts.
    • Monetization is attracting creators. With more ad revenue opportunities, creators are investing more in shorts content, leading to higher-quality videos that retain engagement.

    YouTube Shorts is becoming a major competitor to TikTok for short-form video. If you’re already creating vertical video content, repurposing it for shorts could extend its lifespan and reach.

    6. Pinterest’s engagement is quietly rising

    Pinterest engagement has grown from 3.08% in January 2024 to 5.26% in January 2025, making it one of the strongest platforms for long-term engagement.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Pinterest growing?

    • It’s a search-driven platform, not a feed-based one. Unlike TikTok or Instagram, Pinterest users actively seek out content, meaning engagement is more intentional than passive scrolling.
    • Pins have a long shelf life. A single Pin can generate engagement for months or even years, unlike Instagram posts that disappear quickly.
    • More users are treating Pinterest like a search engine. As Google’s search algorithms shift, more users are turning to Pinterest for inspiration and discovery.

    If you create evergreen content — such as guides, tutorials, and infographics — Pinterest offers long-term engagement potential. Unlike other platforms where content fades quickly, your content on Pinterest can drive engagement long after you post it.

    7. Facebook’s engagement remains steady despite changes

    Facebook’s 5.07% average engagement rate is strong, and its median engagement rate has remained stable at around 5.45% over the past year.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Facebook engagement holding steady?

    • Facebook Groups continue to drive strong engagement. Unlike brand pages, niche Groups see some of the highest interaction rates on the platform.
    • Meta is investing in new monetization tools. Features like subscriptions, Facebook reels monetization, and ad revenue sharing are keeping creators active.
    • Facebook’s demographic is highly engaged. While younger audiences gravitate toward TikTok and Instagram, Facebook’s core user base (ages 30+) remains actively engaged.

    Facebook remains a high-value platform for community-driven engagement — especially if you leverage Groups and interactive content.

    8. X/Twitter engagement continues to decline

    X (formerly Twitter) has dropped from 3.47% in January 2024 to 2.15% in January 2025, making it the second-lowest platform for engagement after Instagram.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the decline?

    • Algorithm changes have reduced organic reach.** X is prioritizing paid subscribers and recommended content, making organic engagement harder to achieve.
    • More users are lurking rather than engaging. Many users consume content without liking, commenting, or reposting, leading to lower engagement rates.
    • Platform instability is affecting creator investment. With frequent policy shifts and monetization changes, fewer creators are prioritizing X.

    Unless you’re focused on news, politics, or real-time commentary, engagement on X will require more effort and consistency to maintain.

    What the data means for your content strategy

    Knowing where engagement is highest is one thing — figuring out how to use that insight in your strategy is another.

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically make a platform the best fit for you. The key question is: What are your goals, and which platform aligns with them?

    Here’s how to refine your approach based on the data.

    1. Pick the platform that aligns with your goals

    Not all engagement is equal, and different platforms serve different purposes. Here's how you can adjust based on what you're trying to achieve:

    • For high engagement per post: Focus on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Pinterest. LinkedIn and Facebook have strong engagement through comments and community-driven content. Pinterest excels at evergreen content, driving steady engagement long after posting.
    • For massive reach potential: Go with Instagram and TikTok. While Instagram’s engagement rate may be lower, it offers vast reach, and TikTok’s discovery algorithm allows even smaller accounts to go viral.
    • For video-focused engagement: TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the best platforms. Short-form video drives some of the highest engagement rates, and repurposing video across platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Instagram) can boost your reach without extra work.
    • For real-time conversations: If your goal is immediate interactions, go with Threads or X (Twitter). Both excel in real-time discussions, with Threads gaining traction for organic engagement and X still being key for news-driven content.

    Takeaway: Instead of trying to be everywhere, focus on the platforms that align with your specific goals. Don’t just chase high engagement rates — consider how each platform fits your content objectives.

    2. Adapt your content format for each platform

    Each platform prioritizes different formats based on user behavior. Here’s how you can tailor your content:

    • LinkedIn is about conversation starters. Use long-form posts, carousels, and documents to encourage discussions and showcase expertise.
    • Instagram’s engagement is increasingly happening behind the scenes — so focus on Reels that generate saves and shares, not just likes.
    • TikTok favors content that keeps people watching. Go for quick hooks and engaging narratives that are visually compelling from the start.
    • Pinterest excels with evergreen content that gets better over time. High-quality visuals, step-by-step guides, and search-optimized content will perform best here.

    Takeaway: Tailor your content to the platform—what works on Instagram doesn’t necessarily work on LinkedIn. Focus on creating platform-first content that aligns with user expectations and engagement behaviors.

    3. Fine-tune your posting strategy for maximum engagement

    Engagement isn’t just about what you post — it’s about when and how often you post. Each platform rewards different posting behaviors, so optimizing your frequency is key.

    • For LinkedIn and Facebook: Focus on quality over quantity. Posts that sustain engagement over time tend to do better, so one well-crafted post a few times a week can be enough.
    • For Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts: These platforms thrive on frequency. Post daily to increase visibility and maintain engagement, but always prioritize quality content that resonates with your audience.
    • For Threads and X: Engage in real-time conversations — post multiple times a day if possible, but engage actively with others’ content to build a community.

    Takeaway: Match your posting frequency to the platform’s algorithm. Some platforms reward quality posts over consistency (LinkedIn, Facebook), while others, like TikTok and Instagram, reward daily posts that build momentum.

    Play to the strengths of each platform

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically mean a platform is the right fit for you. What matters most is how well a platform aligns with your goals — whether that’s visibility, deep engagement, video performance, or real-time interaction.

    Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, focus on the platforms that play to your strengths and audience behaviors. Adapt your content format, posting strategy, and engagement approach to work with the strengths of each platform rather than against them.

  • The 11 Best Social Media Analytics Tools for Creators and Marketers

    The 11 Best Social Media Analytics Tools for Creators and Marketers

    Social media analytics can be a goldmine of insights to inform your strategy. But how do you stitch them together? Here are 11 social media analytics tools that can help.LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Think you know which social platform has the most engagement? The data might surprise you.

    Social media trends are always evolving, but lately, engagement has been shifting in unexpected ways. LinkedIn is seeing record-high interactions, Pinterest is quietly on the rise, and Threads — once a breakout success — is settling into more stable patterns. Meanwhile, Instagram’s engagement is lower than ever, but that doesn’t mean it’s losing relevance.

    If you’ve ever felt like social media engagement is unpredictable, you’re not alone. But while platforms and algorithms change, one thing remains the same: understanding the data gives you an edge.

    At Buffer, we analyzed millions of posts across LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, X, Threads, and Pinterest to uncover where engagement is thriving, slowing down, and what it all means for your content strategy.

    Here’s what we found:

    • Which platforms have the highest and lowest engagement rates this year
    • How audience behavior is shifting across social media
    • What’s behind LinkedIn’s engagement surge and Instagram’s engagement dip
    • How to adjust your content strategy based on 2025’s engagement trends

    If you want to stay ahead of the curve and make smarter content decisions, this article has the insights you need.

    Let’s dive in.

    What is engagement rate and why does it matter?

    Engagement rate is one of the most important social media metrics — but it’s also one of the most misunderstood.

    At its core, engagement rate measures how much people interact with your content relative to how many people see it. It’s not just about visibility — it’s about connection.

    For example:

    • A post that reaches 10,000 people but gets only a few likes? Low engagement.
    • A post that reaches 1,000 people but sparks hundreds of interactions? High engagement.

    That’s why engagement rate is one of the strongest indicators of content performance. It tells you:

    • How well your content connects with your audience.
    • How likely your content is to be amplified by the platform’s algorithm.
    • Whether your audience is passive or actively engaging.

    The key considerations about engagement rate data

    Before we dive into the rankings, here are some key considerations to reflect the nuance of this report:

    • Engagement rate ≠ Total engagement volume. Platforms with massive reach — like Instagram — may have lower engagement rates but still drive more total interactions than smaller, higher-engagement platforms like LinkedIn. A 1% engagement rate on Instagram could mean thousands of interactions, while a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn might result in far fewer total engagements.
    • Each platform encourages different behaviors. LinkedIn prioritizes comments and discussions, while Instagram thrives on shares and saves. These behavioral differences mean a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn doesn’t equate to a 6% engagement rate on TikTok.
    • What counts as engagement varies by platform. Saves on Instagram, pins on Pinterest, and comments on YouTube all count as engagement, but they reflect different user behaviors and levels of intent.
    • Not all engagement is public. Private interactions — like bookmarks, DMs, and link clicks — aren’t always reflected in engagement rate calculations.

    How we calculate engagement rate

    At Buffer, we calculate engagement rate using the following formula:

    (Total Interactions / Total Impressions) × 100 = Engagement Rate (%)

    To provide the most accurate view of engagement trends, we analyze engagement rates in two ways:

    • Averages which help us compare platforms at a high level—showing where engagement is strongest overall.
    • Medians over time which reveal the story of how engagement is evolving month by month.

    Now that we understand what engagement rate really measures — and its nuances across platforms — let’s get into the rankings.

    Average engagement rates by platform: Who’s leading the engagement game?

    To determine where users are engaging the most, we analyzed average engagement rates across eight major social platforms over a one-year timeframe. Here’s how they stack up:

    Platform Average Engagement Rate (%)
    LinkedIn 6.50% 📈
    Facebook 5.07%
    TikTok 4.86%
    Threads 4.51%
    YouTube 4.41%
    Pinterest 3.46%
    X (Twitter) 2.31%
    Instagram 1.16%

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    At first glance, the average engagement rates across these platforms tell us a few key things:

    • LinkedIn is the top performer. With a median engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn has outpaced all other platforms
    • Facebook engagement remains steady. At 5.07%, Facebook continues to generate strong engagement
    • TikTok ranks higher than YouTube for engagement. With 4.86%, TikTok remains a leader for short-form video, with YouTube not far behind with 4.41%
    • Threads has outpaced X/Twitter in engagement. Threads’ 4.51% engagement rate is significantly higher than X’s 2.31%
    • Instagram’s engagement rate is the lowest. At 1.16%, Instagram’s engagement is significantly lower than other platforms, though private interactions (DMs, saves) likely contribute to hidden engagement that isn’t captured in public metrics.

    Now, while these median numbers provide a broad comparison of which platforms drive the most engagement overall, they don’t capture how engagement has shifted over time.

    To understand how engagement is evolving, we decided to look at median engagement rates over the year between January 2024 to January 2025.

    Engagement patterns between January 2024 to January 2025

    Engagement rates don’t exist in a vacuum. User behavior, algorithm changes, and broader industry shifts all influence how people interact with content.

    While the overall median engagement rates tell us which platforms perform best overall, the median engagement rates over time reveal how engagement is changing month by month.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Here’s what we found from analyzing median engagement rates from January 2024 to January 2025.

    1. LinkedIn’s engagement is steadily rising

    With an average engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn leads all platforms, but the real story is its growth over time.

    In January 2024, LinkedIn’s median engagement rate was 6.00%. By January 2025, it had risen to 8.01%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What could be driving this increase?

    • Less content saturation = higher visibility. Only 1% of LinkedIn users post regularly, meaning content has less competition and more potential reach.
    • The algorithm rewards conversations. Posts with early engagement are boosted to second- and third-degree connections, expanding visibility.
    • More diverse content formats are succeeding. Carousels see significant engagement, and the platform just introduced video.

    LinkedIn remains the strongest platform for authority-building and organic reach. If you’ve been posting inconsistently, now is the time to lean in.

    2. Instagram’s engagement is evolving

    While Instagram has the lowest average engagement rate (1.16%), its interaction patterns are shifting rather than simply declining.

    In January 2024, Instagram’s median engagement rate was 2.94%. By January 2025, it had adjusted to 0.61%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    This change reflects a broader shift in how users engage with content rather than a loss of platform relevance. What’s behind the shift?

    • More content is being consumed than ever. With reels and stories dominating, users are watching more but interacting differently — passive engagement is rising, even if likes and comments aren’t as visible.
    • Engagement is becoming more private. Saves, DMs, and shares are increasing, but these interactions don’t contribute to public engagement metrics.
    • Reels success depends on depth, not just views. High-performing reels tend to spark conversation or encourage sharing, while others may generate views without direct engagement.

    Instagram engagement isn’t disappearing — it’s moving behind the scenes. Create saveable content for the algorithm, share your posts with friends, and reply via DM — that’s where real engagement is happening.

    3. Threads’ engagement is stabilizing after an initial surge

    Threads launched with high engagement, but its numbers have steadily declined from 4.76% in February 2024 to 3.60% in February 2025. While Threads still outperforms X/Twitter in engagement rate, its growth phase has leveled out.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • The early adopter effect is fading. When Threads launched, engagement was high as users explored the platform. As more users join, engagement is now spreading out across a larger content pool.
    • More content = more competition. Initially, with fewer users posting, content was more visible. Now, as more creators share content, engagement is becoming more distributed.
    • **Algorithm shifts are influencing visibility.** Threads started with a purely chronological feed, but Meta has since introduced ranking signals, making engagement less predictable.

    Threads remains a high-engagement platform, but success now depends on participation, not just presence. Prioritizing conversations, real-time engagement, and interactive content will help sustain engagement as the platform matures.

    💡
    We only started collecting engagement data from Threads in February 2024.

    4. TikTok engagement remains high, but patterns are changing

    With an average engagement rate of 4.86%, TikTok is still one of the strongest platforms for engagement, but its median engagement rate has gradually declined from 5.14% in January 2024 to 4.56% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • TikTok’s algorithm is rewarding retention over interactions.** Watch time and replays are now bigger engagement drivers than likes or comments, shifting what “high engagement” looks like on the platform. Pro tip: Keep your videos above 1-minute as we’ve found that longer TikToks perform better in the algorithm.
    • Short-form video competition is increasing. With Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and even LinkedIn embracing video, TikTok is no longer the only dominant player in the space.
    • More brands and advertisers = more polished content. TikTok’s early success was built on authentic, unpolished content, but as brands ramp up their presence, engagement rates have become less predictable.

    TikTok is still a powerhouse for engagement, but the type of engagement that matters is shifting. Focus on content that drives watch time and shares, not just likes and comments.

    5. YouTube Shorts engagement is catching up to TikTok

    YouTube Shorts’ 4.41% average engagement rate puts it just behind TikTok, but its median engagement rate has risen from 3.95% in January 2024 to 4.71% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the increase?

    • YouTube’s search advantage. Unlike TikTok, YouTube content is discoverable long after posting, meaning shorts have a longer engagement lifespan than TikTok videos.
    • Higher audience intent. YouTube users are actively searching for content, while TikTok users are passively scrolling, leading to more engaged viewers on shorts.
    • Monetization is attracting creators. With more ad revenue opportunities, creators are investing more in shorts content, leading to higher-quality videos that retain engagement.

    YouTube Shorts is becoming a major competitor to TikTok for short-form video. If you’re already creating vertical video content, repurposing it for shorts could extend its lifespan and reach.

    6. Pinterest’s engagement is quietly rising

    Pinterest engagement has grown from 3.08% in January 2024 to 5.26% in January 2025, making it one of the strongest platforms for long-term engagement.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Pinterest growing?

    • It’s a search-driven platform, not a feed-based one. Unlike TikTok or Instagram, Pinterest users actively seek out content, meaning engagement is more intentional than passive scrolling.
    • Pins have a long shelf life. A single Pin can generate engagement for months or even years, unlike Instagram posts that disappear quickly.
    • More users are treating Pinterest like a search engine. As Google’s search algorithms shift, more users are turning to Pinterest for inspiration and discovery.

    If you create evergreen content — such as guides, tutorials, and infographics — Pinterest offers long-term engagement potential. Unlike other platforms where content fades quickly, your content on Pinterest can drive engagement long after you post it.

    7. Facebook’s engagement remains steady despite changes

    Facebook’s 5.07% average engagement rate is strong, and its median engagement rate has remained stable at around 5.45% over the past year.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Facebook engagement holding steady?

    • Facebook Groups continue to drive strong engagement. Unlike brand pages, niche Groups see some of the highest interaction rates on the platform.
    • Meta is investing in new monetization tools. Features like subscriptions, Facebook reels monetization, and ad revenue sharing are keeping creators active.
    • Facebook’s demographic is highly engaged. While younger audiences gravitate toward TikTok and Instagram, Facebook’s core user base (ages 30+) remains actively engaged.

    Facebook remains a high-value platform for community-driven engagement — especially if you leverage Groups and interactive content.

    8. X/Twitter engagement continues to decline

    X (formerly Twitter) has dropped from 3.47% in January 2024 to 2.15% in January 2025, making it the second-lowest platform for engagement after Instagram.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the decline?

    • Algorithm changes have reduced organic reach.** X is prioritizing paid subscribers and recommended content, making organic engagement harder to achieve.
    • More users are lurking rather than engaging. Many users consume content without liking, commenting, or reposting, leading to lower engagement rates.
    • Platform instability is affecting creator investment. With frequent policy shifts and monetization changes, fewer creators are prioritizing X.

    Unless you’re focused on news, politics, or real-time commentary, engagement on X will require more effort and consistency to maintain.

    What the data means for your content strategy

    Knowing where engagement is highest is one thing — figuring out how to use that insight in your strategy is another.

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically make a platform the best fit for you. The key question is: What are your goals, and which platform aligns with them?

    Here’s how to refine your approach based on the data.

    1. Pick the platform that aligns with your goals

    Not all engagement is equal, and different platforms serve different purposes. Here's how you can adjust based on what you're trying to achieve:

    • For high engagement per post: Focus on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Pinterest. LinkedIn and Facebook have strong engagement through comments and community-driven content. Pinterest excels at evergreen content, driving steady engagement long after posting.
    • For massive reach potential: Go with Instagram and TikTok. While Instagram’s engagement rate may be lower, it offers vast reach, and TikTok’s discovery algorithm allows even smaller accounts to go viral.
    • For video-focused engagement: TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the best platforms. Short-form video drives some of the highest engagement rates, and repurposing video across platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Instagram) can boost your reach without extra work.
    • For real-time conversations: If your goal is immediate interactions, go with Threads or X (Twitter). Both excel in real-time discussions, with Threads gaining traction for organic engagement and X still being key for news-driven content.

    Takeaway: Instead of trying to be everywhere, focus on the platforms that align with your specific goals. Don’t just chase high engagement rates — consider how each platform fits your content objectives.

    2. Adapt your content format for each platform

    Each platform prioritizes different formats based on user behavior. Here’s how you can tailor your content:

    • LinkedIn is about conversation starters. Use long-form posts, carousels, and documents to encourage discussions and showcase expertise.
    • Instagram’s engagement is increasingly happening behind the scenes — so focus on Reels that generate saves and shares, not just likes.
    • TikTok favors content that keeps people watching. Go for quick hooks and engaging narratives that are visually compelling from the start.
    • Pinterest excels with evergreen content that gets better over time. High-quality visuals, step-by-step guides, and search-optimized content will perform best here.

    Takeaway: Tailor your content to the platform—what works on Instagram doesn’t necessarily work on LinkedIn. Focus on creating platform-first content that aligns with user expectations and engagement behaviors.

    3. Fine-tune your posting strategy for maximum engagement

    Engagement isn’t just about what you post — it’s about when and how often you post. Each platform rewards different posting behaviors, so optimizing your frequency is key.

    • For LinkedIn and Facebook: Focus on quality over quantity. Posts that sustain engagement over time tend to do better, so one well-crafted post a few times a week can be enough.
    • For Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts: These platforms thrive on frequency. Post daily to increase visibility and maintain engagement, but always prioritize quality content that resonates with your audience.
    • For Threads and X: Engage in real-time conversations — post multiple times a day if possible, but engage actively with others’ content to build a community.

    Takeaway: Match your posting frequency to the platform’s algorithm. Some platforms reward quality posts over consistency (LinkedIn, Facebook), while others, like TikTok and Instagram, reward daily posts that build momentum.

    Play to the strengths of each platform

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically mean a platform is the right fit for you. What matters most is how well a platform aligns with your goals — whether that’s visibility, deep engagement, video performance, or real-time interaction.

    Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, focus on the platforms that play to your strengths and audience behaviors. Adapt your content format, posting strategy, and engagement approach to work with the strengths of each platform rather than against them.

  • We Paid A Candidate To Spend A Day Working With Us, Here’s How It Went

    We Paid A Candidate To Spend A Day Working With Us, Here’s How It Went

    In a recent hiring round, we tried something new. I asked a candidate in the final stages of interviewing to spend a full day working with us.LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Think you know which social platform has the most engagement? The data might surprise you.

    Social media trends are always evolving, but lately, engagement has been shifting in unexpected ways. LinkedIn is seeing record-high interactions, Pinterest is quietly on the rise, and Threads — once a breakout success — is settling into more stable patterns. Meanwhile, Instagram’s engagement is lower than ever, but that doesn’t mean it’s losing relevance.

    If you’ve ever felt like social media engagement is unpredictable, you’re not alone. But while platforms and algorithms change, one thing remains the same: understanding the data gives you an edge.

    At Buffer, we analyzed millions of posts across LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, X, Threads, and Pinterest to uncover where engagement is thriving, slowing down, and what it all means for your content strategy.

    Here’s what we found:

    • Which platforms have the highest and lowest engagement rates this year
    • How audience behavior is shifting across social media
    • What’s behind LinkedIn’s engagement surge and Instagram’s engagement dip
    • How to adjust your content strategy based on 2025’s engagement trends

    If you want to stay ahead of the curve and make smarter content decisions, this article has the insights you need.

    Let’s dive in.

    What is engagement rate and why does it matter?

    Engagement rate is one of the most important social media metrics — but it’s also one of the most misunderstood.

    At its core, engagement rate measures how much people interact with your content relative to how many people see it. It’s not just about visibility — it’s about connection.

    For example:

    • A post that reaches 10,000 people but gets only a few likes? Low engagement.
    • A post that reaches 1,000 people but sparks hundreds of interactions? High engagement.

    That’s why engagement rate is one of the strongest indicators of content performance. It tells you:

    • How well your content connects with your audience.
    • How likely your content is to be amplified by the platform’s algorithm.
    • Whether your audience is passive or actively engaging.

    The key considerations about engagement rate data

    Before we dive into the rankings, here are some key considerations to reflect the nuance of this report:

    • Engagement rate ≠ Total engagement volume. Platforms with massive reach — like Instagram — may have lower engagement rates but still drive more total interactions than smaller, higher-engagement platforms like LinkedIn. A 1% engagement rate on Instagram could mean thousands of interactions, while a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn might result in far fewer total engagements.
    • Each platform encourages different behaviors. LinkedIn prioritizes comments and discussions, while Instagram thrives on shares and saves. These behavioral differences mean a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn doesn’t equate to a 6% engagement rate on TikTok.
    • What counts as engagement varies by platform. Saves on Instagram, pins on Pinterest, and comments on YouTube all count as engagement, but they reflect different user behaviors and levels of intent.
    • Not all engagement is public. Private interactions — like bookmarks, DMs, and link clicks — aren’t always reflected in engagement rate calculations.

    How we calculate engagement rate

    At Buffer, we calculate engagement rate using the following formula:

    (Total Interactions / Total Impressions) × 100 = Engagement Rate (%)

    To provide the most accurate view of engagement trends, we analyze engagement rates in two ways:

    • Averages which help us compare platforms at a high level—showing where engagement is strongest overall.
    • Medians over time which reveal the story of how engagement is evolving month by month.

    Now that we understand what engagement rate really measures — and its nuances across platforms — let’s get into the rankings.

    Average engagement rates by platform: Who’s leading the engagement game?

    To determine where users are engaging the most, we analyzed average engagement rates across eight major social platforms over a one-year timeframe. Here’s how they stack up:

    Platform Average Engagement Rate (%)
    LinkedIn 6.50% 📈
    Facebook 5.07%
    TikTok 4.86%
    Threads 4.51%
    YouTube 4.41%
    Pinterest 3.46%
    X (Twitter) 2.31%
    Instagram 1.16%

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    At first glance, the average engagement rates across these platforms tell us a few key things:

    • LinkedIn is the top performer. With a median engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn has outpaced all other platforms
    • Facebook engagement remains steady. At 5.07%, Facebook continues to generate strong engagement
    • TikTok ranks higher than YouTube for engagement. With 4.86%, TikTok remains a leader for short-form video, with YouTube not far behind with 4.41%
    • Threads has outpaced X/Twitter in engagement. Threads’ 4.51% engagement rate is significantly higher than X’s 2.31%
    • Instagram’s engagement rate is the lowest. At 1.16%, Instagram’s engagement is significantly lower than other platforms, though private interactions (DMs, saves) likely contribute to hidden engagement that isn’t captured in public metrics.

    Now, while these median numbers provide a broad comparison of which platforms drive the most engagement overall, they don’t capture how engagement has shifted over time.

    To understand how engagement is evolving, we decided to look at median engagement rates over the year between January 2024 to January 2025.

    Engagement patterns between January 2024 to January 2025

    Engagement rates don’t exist in a vacuum. User behavior, algorithm changes, and broader industry shifts all influence how people interact with content.

    While the overall median engagement rates tell us which platforms perform best overall, the median engagement rates over time reveal how engagement is changing month by month.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Here’s what we found from analyzing median engagement rates from January 2024 to January 2025.

    1. LinkedIn’s engagement is steadily rising

    With an average engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn leads all platforms, but the real story is its growth over time.

    In January 2024, LinkedIn’s median engagement rate was 6.00%. By January 2025, it had risen to 8.01%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What could be driving this increase?

    • Less content saturation = higher visibility. Only 1% of LinkedIn users post regularly, meaning content has less competition and more potential reach.
    • The algorithm rewards conversations. Posts with early engagement are boosted to second- and third-degree connections, expanding visibility.
    • More diverse content formats are succeeding. Carousels see significant engagement, and the platform just introduced video.

    LinkedIn remains the strongest platform for authority-building and organic reach. If you’ve been posting inconsistently, now is the time to lean in.

    2. Instagram’s engagement is evolving

    While Instagram has the lowest average engagement rate (1.16%), its interaction patterns are shifting rather than simply declining.

    In January 2024, Instagram’s median engagement rate was 2.94%. By January 2025, it had adjusted to 0.61%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    This change reflects a broader shift in how users engage with content rather than a loss of platform relevance. What’s behind the shift?

    • More content is being consumed than ever. With reels and stories dominating, users are watching more but interacting differently — passive engagement is rising, even if likes and comments aren’t as visible.
    • Engagement is becoming more private. Saves, DMs, and shares are increasing, but these interactions don’t contribute to public engagement metrics.
    • Reels success depends on depth, not just views. High-performing reels tend to spark conversation or encourage sharing, while others may generate views without direct engagement.

    Instagram engagement isn’t disappearing — it’s moving behind the scenes. Create saveable content for the algorithm, share your posts with friends, and reply via DM — that’s where real engagement is happening.

    3. Threads’ engagement is stabilizing after an initial surge

    Threads launched with high engagement, but its numbers have steadily declined from 4.76% in February 2024 to 3.60% in February 2025. While Threads still outperforms X/Twitter in engagement rate, its growth phase has leveled out.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • The early adopter effect is fading. When Threads launched, engagement was high as users explored the platform. As more users join, engagement is now spreading out across a larger content pool.
    • More content = more competition. Initially, with fewer users posting, content was more visible. Now, as more creators share content, engagement is becoming more distributed.
    • **Algorithm shifts are influencing visibility.** Threads started with a purely chronological feed, but Meta has since introduced ranking signals, making engagement less predictable.

    Threads remains a high-engagement platform, but success now depends on participation, not just presence. Prioritizing conversations, real-time engagement, and interactive content will help sustain engagement as the platform matures.

    💡
    We only started collecting engagement data from Threads in February 2024.

    4. TikTok engagement remains high, but patterns are changing

    With an average engagement rate of 4.86%, TikTok is still one of the strongest platforms for engagement, but its median engagement rate has gradually declined from 5.14% in January 2024 to 4.56% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • TikTok’s algorithm is rewarding retention over interactions.** Watch time and replays are now bigger engagement drivers than likes or comments, shifting what “high engagement” looks like on the platform. Pro tip: Keep your videos above 1-minute as we’ve found that longer TikToks perform better in the algorithm.
    • Short-form video competition is increasing. With Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and even LinkedIn embracing video, TikTok is no longer the only dominant player in the space.
    • More brands and advertisers = more polished content. TikTok’s early success was built on authentic, unpolished content, but as brands ramp up their presence, engagement rates have become less predictable.

    TikTok is still a powerhouse for engagement, but the type of engagement that matters is shifting. Focus on content that drives watch time and shares, not just likes and comments.

    5. YouTube Shorts engagement is catching up to TikTok

    YouTube Shorts’ 4.41% average engagement rate puts it just behind TikTok, but its median engagement rate has risen from 3.95% in January 2024 to 4.71% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the increase?

    • YouTube’s search advantage. Unlike TikTok, YouTube content is discoverable long after posting, meaning shorts have a longer engagement lifespan than TikTok videos.
    • Higher audience intent. YouTube users are actively searching for content, while TikTok users are passively scrolling, leading to more engaged viewers on shorts.
    • Monetization is attracting creators. With more ad revenue opportunities, creators are investing more in shorts content, leading to higher-quality videos that retain engagement.

    YouTube Shorts is becoming a major competitor to TikTok for short-form video. If you’re already creating vertical video content, repurposing it for shorts could extend its lifespan and reach.

    6. Pinterest’s engagement is quietly rising

    Pinterest engagement has grown from 3.08% in January 2024 to 5.26% in January 2025, making it one of the strongest platforms for long-term engagement.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Pinterest growing?

    • It’s a search-driven platform, not a feed-based one. Unlike TikTok or Instagram, Pinterest users actively seek out content, meaning engagement is more intentional than passive scrolling.
    • Pins have a long shelf life. A single Pin can generate engagement for months or even years, unlike Instagram posts that disappear quickly.
    • More users are treating Pinterest like a search engine. As Google’s search algorithms shift, more users are turning to Pinterest for inspiration and discovery.

    If you create evergreen content — such as guides, tutorials, and infographics — Pinterest offers long-term engagement potential. Unlike other platforms where content fades quickly, your content on Pinterest can drive engagement long after you post it.

    7. Facebook’s engagement remains steady despite changes

    Facebook’s 5.07% average engagement rate is strong, and its median engagement rate has remained stable at around 5.45% over the past year.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Facebook engagement holding steady?

    • Facebook Groups continue to drive strong engagement. Unlike brand pages, niche Groups see some of the highest interaction rates on the platform.
    • Meta is investing in new monetization tools. Features like subscriptions, Facebook reels monetization, and ad revenue sharing are keeping creators active.
    • Facebook’s demographic is highly engaged. While younger audiences gravitate toward TikTok and Instagram, Facebook’s core user base (ages 30+) remains actively engaged.

    Facebook remains a high-value platform for community-driven engagement — especially if you leverage Groups and interactive content.

    8. X/Twitter engagement continues to decline

    X (formerly Twitter) has dropped from 3.47% in January 2024 to 2.15% in January 2025, making it the second-lowest platform for engagement after Instagram.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the decline?

    • Algorithm changes have reduced organic reach.** X is prioritizing paid subscribers and recommended content, making organic engagement harder to achieve.
    • More users are lurking rather than engaging. Many users consume content without liking, commenting, or reposting, leading to lower engagement rates.
    • Platform instability is affecting creator investment. With frequent policy shifts and monetization changes, fewer creators are prioritizing X.

    Unless you’re focused on news, politics, or real-time commentary, engagement on X will require more effort and consistency to maintain.

    What the data means for your content strategy

    Knowing where engagement is highest is one thing — figuring out how to use that insight in your strategy is another.

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically make a platform the best fit for you. The key question is: What are your goals, and which platform aligns with them?

    Here’s how to refine your approach based on the data.

    1. Pick the platform that aligns with your goals

    Not all engagement is equal, and different platforms serve different purposes. Here's how you can adjust based on what you're trying to achieve:

    • For high engagement per post: Focus on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Pinterest. LinkedIn and Facebook have strong engagement through comments and community-driven content. Pinterest excels at evergreen content, driving steady engagement long after posting.
    • For massive reach potential: Go with Instagram and TikTok. While Instagram’s engagement rate may be lower, it offers vast reach, and TikTok’s discovery algorithm allows even smaller accounts to go viral.
    • For video-focused engagement: TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the best platforms. Short-form video drives some of the highest engagement rates, and repurposing video across platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Instagram) can boost your reach without extra work.
    • For real-time conversations: If your goal is immediate interactions, go with Threads or X (Twitter). Both excel in real-time discussions, with Threads gaining traction for organic engagement and X still being key for news-driven content.

    Takeaway: Instead of trying to be everywhere, focus on the platforms that align with your specific goals. Don’t just chase high engagement rates — consider how each platform fits your content objectives.

    2. Adapt your content format for each platform

    Each platform prioritizes different formats based on user behavior. Here’s how you can tailor your content:

    • LinkedIn is about conversation starters. Use long-form posts, carousels, and documents to encourage discussions and showcase expertise.
    • Instagram’s engagement is increasingly happening behind the scenes — so focus on Reels that generate saves and shares, not just likes.
    • TikTok favors content that keeps people watching. Go for quick hooks and engaging narratives that are visually compelling from the start.
    • Pinterest excels with evergreen content that gets better over time. High-quality visuals, step-by-step guides, and search-optimized content will perform best here.

    Takeaway: Tailor your content to the platform—what works on Instagram doesn’t necessarily work on LinkedIn. Focus on creating platform-first content that aligns with user expectations and engagement behaviors.

    3. Fine-tune your posting strategy for maximum engagement

    Engagement isn’t just about what you post — it’s about when and how often you post. Each platform rewards different posting behaviors, so optimizing your frequency is key.

    • For LinkedIn and Facebook: Focus on quality over quantity. Posts that sustain engagement over time tend to do better, so one well-crafted post a few times a week can be enough.
    • For Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts: These platforms thrive on frequency. Post daily to increase visibility and maintain engagement, but always prioritize quality content that resonates with your audience.
    • For Threads and X: Engage in real-time conversations — post multiple times a day if possible, but engage actively with others’ content to build a community.

    Takeaway: Match your posting frequency to the platform’s algorithm. Some platforms reward quality posts over consistency (LinkedIn, Facebook), while others, like TikTok and Instagram, reward daily posts that build momentum.

    Play to the strengths of each platform

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically mean a platform is the right fit for you. What matters most is how well a platform aligns with your goals — whether that’s visibility, deep engagement, video performance, or real-time interaction.

    Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, focus on the platforms that play to your strengths and audience behaviors. Adapt your content format, posting strategy, and engagement approach to work with the strengths of each platform rather than against them.

  • LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    We dug into the engagement rate data of eight social media platforms.LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Think you know which social platform has the most engagement? The data might surprise you.

    Social media trends are always evolving, but lately, engagement has been shifting in unexpected ways. LinkedIn is seeing record-high interactions, Pinterest is quietly on the rise, and Threads — once a breakout success — is settling into more stable patterns. Meanwhile, Instagram’s engagement is lower than ever, but that doesn’t mean it’s losing relevance.

    If you’ve ever felt like social media engagement is unpredictable, you’re not alone. But while platforms and algorithms change, one thing remains the same: understanding the data gives you an edge.

    At Buffer, we analyzed millions of posts across LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, X, Threads, and Pinterest to uncover where engagement is thriving, slowing down, and what it all means for your content strategy.

    Here’s what we found:

    • Which platforms have the highest and lowest engagement rates this year
    • How audience behavior is shifting across social media
    • What’s behind LinkedIn’s engagement surge and Instagram’s engagement dip
    • How to adjust your content strategy based on 2025’s engagement trends

    If you want to stay ahead of the curve and make smarter content decisions, this article has the insights you need.

    Let’s dive in.

    What is engagement rate and why does it matter?

    Engagement rate is one of the most important social media metrics — but it’s also one of the most misunderstood.

    At its core, engagement rate measures how much people interact with your content relative to how many people see it. It’s not just about visibility — it’s about connection.

    For example:

    • A post that reaches 10,000 people but gets only a few likes? Low engagement.
    • A post that reaches 1,000 people but sparks hundreds of interactions? High engagement.

    That’s why engagement rate is one of the strongest indicators of content performance. It tells you:

    • How well your content connects with your audience.
    • How likely your content is to be amplified by the platform’s algorithm.
    • Whether your audience is passive or actively engaging.

    The key considerations about engagement rate data

    Before we dive into the rankings, here are some key considerations to reflect the nuance of this report:

    • Engagement rate ≠ Total engagement volume. Platforms with massive reach — like Instagram — may have lower engagement rates but still drive more total interactions than smaller, higher-engagement platforms like LinkedIn. A 1% engagement rate on Instagram could mean thousands of interactions, while a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn might result in far fewer total engagements.
    • Each platform encourages different behaviors. LinkedIn prioritizes comments and discussions, while Instagram thrives on shares and saves. These behavioral differences mean a 6% engagement rate on LinkedIn doesn’t equate to a 6% engagement rate on TikTok.
    • What counts as engagement varies by platform. Saves on Instagram, pins on Pinterest, and comments on YouTube all count as engagement, but they reflect different user behaviors and levels of intent.
    • Not all engagement is public. Private interactions — like bookmarks, DMs, and link clicks — aren’t always reflected in engagement rate calculations.

    How we calculate engagement rate

    At Buffer, we calculate engagement rate using the following formula:

    (Total Interactions / Total Impressions) × 100 = Engagement Rate (%)

    To provide the most accurate view of engagement trends, we analyze engagement rates in two ways:

    • Averages which help us compare platforms at a high level—showing where engagement is strongest overall.
    • Medians over time which reveal the story of how engagement is evolving month by month.

    Now that we understand what engagement rate really measures — and its nuances across platforms — let’s get into the rankings.

    Average engagement rates by platform: Who’s leading the engagement game?

    To determine where users are engaging the most, we analyzed average engagement rates across eight major social platforms over a one-year timeframe. Here’s how they stack up:

    Platform Average Engagement Rate (%)
    LinkedIn 6.50% 📈
    Facebook 5.07%
    TikTok 4.86%
    Threads 4.51%
    YouTube 4.41%
    Pinterest 3.46%
    X (Twitter) 2.31%
    Instagram 1.16%

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    At first glance, the average engagement rates across these platforms tell us a few key things:

    • LinkedIn is the top performer. With a median engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn has outpaced all other platforms
    • Facebook engagement remains steady. At 5.07%, Facebook continues to generate strong engagement
    • TikTok ranks higher than YouTube for engagement. With 4.86%, TikTok remains a leader for short-form video, with YouTube not far behind with 4.41%
    • Threads has outpaced X/Twitter in engagement. Threads’ 4.51% engagement rate is significantly higher than X’s 2.31%
    • Instagram’s engagement rate is the lowest. At 1.16%, Instagram’s engagement is significantly lower than other platforms, though private interactions (DMs, saves) likely contribute to hidden engagement that isn’t captured in public metrics.

    Now, while these median numbers provide a broad comparison of which platforms drive the most engagement overall, they don’t capture how engagement has shifted over time.

    To understand how engagement is evolving, we decided to look at median engagement rates over the year between January 2024 to January 2025.

    Engagement patterns between January 2024 to January 2025

    Engagement rates don’t exist in a vacuum. User behavior, algorithm changes, and broader industry shifts all influence how people interact with content.

    While the overall median engagement rates tell us which platforms perform best overall, the median engagement rates over time reveal how engagement is changing month by month.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Here’s what we found from analyzing median engagement rates from January 2024 to January 2025.

    1. LinkedIn’s engagement is steadily rising

    With an average engagement rate of 6.50%, LinkedIn leads all platforms, but the real story is its growth over time.

    In January 2024, LinkedIn’s median engagement rate was 6.00%. By January 2025, it had risen to 8.01%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What could be driving this increase?

    • Less content saturation = higher visibility. Only 1% of LinkedIn users post regularly, meaning content has less competition and more potential reach.
    • The algorithm rewards conversations. Posts with early engagement are boosted to second- and third-degree connections, expanding visibility.
    • More diverse content formats are succeeding. Carousels see significant engagement, and the platform just introduced video.

    LinkedIn remains the strongest platform for authority-building and organic reach. If you’ve been posting inconsistently, now is the time to lean in.

    2. Instagram’s engagement is evolving

    While Instagram has the lowest average engagement rate (1.16%), its interaction patterns are shifting rather than simply declining.

    In January 2024, Instagram’s median engagement rate was 2.94%. By January 2025, it had adjusted to 0.61%.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    This change reflects a broader shift in how users engage with content rather than a loss of platform relevance. What’s behind the shift?

    • More content is being consumed than ever. With reels and stories dominating, users are watching more but interacting differently — passive engagement is rising, even if likes and comments aren’t as visible.
    • Engagement is becoming more private. Saves, DMs, and shares are increasing, but these interactions don’t contribute to public engagement metrics.
    • Reels success depends on depth, not just views. High-performing reels tend to spark conversation or encourage sharing, while others may generate views without direct engagement.

    Instagram engagement isn’t disappearing — it’s moving behind the scenes. Create saveable content for the algorithm, share your posts with friends, and reply via DM — that’s where real engagement is happening.

    3. Threads’ engagement is stabilizing after an initial surge

    Threads launched with high engagement, but its numbers have steadily declined from 4.76% in February 2024 to 3.60% in February 2025. While Threads still outperforms X/Twitter in engagement rate, its growth phase has leveled out.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • The early adopter effect is fading. When Threads launched, engagement was high as users explored the platform. As more users join, engagement is now spreading out across a larger content pool.
    • More content = more competition. Initially, with fewer users posting, content was more visible. Now, as more creators share content, engagement is becoming more distributed.
    • **Algorithm shifts are influencing visibility.** Threads started with a purely chronological feed, but Meta has since introduced ranking signals, making engagement less predictable.

    Threads remains a high-engagement platform, but success now depends on participation, not just presence. Prioritizing conversations, real-time engagement, and interactive content will help sustain engagement as the platform matures.

    💡
    We only started collecting engagement data from Threads in February 2024.

    4. TikTok engagement remains high, but patterns are changing

    With an average engagement rate of 4.86%, TikTok is still one of the strongest platforms for engagement, but its median engagement rate has gradually declined from 5.14% in January 2024 to 4.56% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s behind the shift?

    • TikTok’s algorithm is rewarding retention over interactions.** Watch time and replays are now bigger engagement drivers than likes or comments, shifting what “high engagement” looks like on the platform. Pro tip: Keep your videos above 1-minute as we’ve found that longer TikToks perform better in the algorithm.
    • Short-form video competition is increasing. With Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, and even LinkedIn embracing video, TikTok is no longer the only dominant player in the space.
    • More brands and advertisers = more polished content. TikTok’s early success was built on authentic, unpolished content, but as brands ramp up their presence, engagement rates have become less predictable.

    TikTok is still a powerhouse for engagement, but the type of engagement that matters is shifting. Focus on content that drives watch time and shares, not just likes and comments.

    5. YouTube Shorts engagement is catching up to TikTok

    YouTube Shorts’ 4.41% average engagement rate puts it just behind TikTok, but its median engagement rate has risen from 3.95% in January 2024 to 4.71% in January 2025.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the increase?

    • YouTube’s search advantage. Unlike TikTok, YouTube content is discoverable long after posting, meaning shorts have a longer engagement lifespan than TikTok videos.
    • Higher audience intent. YouTube users are actively searching for content, while TikTok users are passively scrolling, leading to more engaged viewers on shorts.
    • Monetization is attracting creators. With more ad revenue opportunities, creators are investing more in shorts content, leading to higher-quality videos that retain engagement.

    YouTube Shorts is becoming a major competitor to TikTok for short-form video. If you’re already creating vertical video content, repurposing it for shorts could extend its lifespan and reach.

    6. Pinterest’s engagement is quietly rising

    Pinterest engagement has grown from 3.08% in January 2024 to 5.26% in January 2025, making it one of the strongest platforms for long-term engagement.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Pinterest growing?

    • It’s a search-driven platform, not a feed-based one. Unlike TikTok or Instagram, Pinterest users actively seek out content, meaning engagement is more intentional than passive scrolling.
    • Pins have a long shelf life. A single Pin can generate engagement for months or even years, unlike Instagram posts that disappear quickly.
    • More users are treating Pinterest like a search engine. As Google’s search algorithms shift, more users are turning to Pinterest for inspiration and discovery.

    If you create evergreen content — such as guides, tutorials, and infographics — Pinterest offers long-term engagement potential. Unlike other platforms where content fades quickly, your content on Pinterest can drive engagement long after you post it.

    7. Facebook’s engagement remains steady despite changes

    Facebook’s 5.07% average engagement rate is strong, and its median engagement rate has remained stable at around 5.45% over the past year.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    Why is Facebook engagement holding steady?

    • Facebook Groups continue to drive strong engagement. Unlike brand pages, niche Groups see some of the highest interaction rates on the platform.
    • Meta is investing in new monetization tools. Features like subscriptions, Facebook reels monetization, and ad revenue sharing are keeping creators active.
    • Facebook’s demographic is highly engaged. While younger audiences gravitate toward TikTok and Instagram, Facebook’s core user base (ages 30+) remains actively engaged.

    Facebook remains a high-value platform for community-driven engagement — especially if you leverage Groups and interactive content.

    8. X/Twitter engagement continues to decline

    X (formerly Twitter) has dropped from 3.47% in January 2024 to 2.15% in January 2025, making it the second-lowest platform for engagement after Instagram.

    LinkedIn Leads in Engagement at 6.50% — Here’s How Other Platforms Stack Up

    What’s driving the decline?

    • Algorithm changes have reduced organic reach.** X is prioritizing paid subscribers and recommended content, making organic engagement harder to achieve.
    • More users are lurking rather than engaging. Many users consume content without liking, commenting, or reposting, leading to lower engagement rates.
    • Platform instability is affecting creator investment. With frequent policy shifts and monetization changes, fewer creators are prioritizing X.

    Unless you’re focused on news, politics, or real-time commentary, engagement on X will require more effort and consistency to maintain.

    What the data means for your content strategy

    Knowing where engagement is highest is one thing — figuring out how to use that insight in your strategy is another.

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically make a platform the best fit for you. The key question is: What are your goals, and which platform aligns with them?

    Here’s how to refine your approach based on the data.

    1. Pick the platform that aligns with your goals

    Not all engagement is equal, and different platforms serve different purposes. Here's how you can adjust based on what you're trying to achieve:

    • For high engagement per post: Focus on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Pinterest. LinkedIn and Facebook have strong engagement through comments and community-driven content. Pinterest excels at evergreen content, driving steady engagement long after posting.
    • For massive reach potential: Go with Instagram and TikTok. While Instagram’s engagement rate may be lower, it offers vast reach, and TikTok’s discovery algorithm allows even smaller accounts to go viral.
    • For video-focused engagement: TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the best platforms. Short-form video drives some of the highest engagement rates, and repurposing video across platforms (TikTok, YouTube, Instagram) can boost your reach without extra work.
    • For real-time conversations: If your goal is immediate interactions, go with Threads or X (Twitter). Both excel in real-time discussions, with Threads gaining traction for organic engagement and X still being key for news-driven content.

    Takeaway: Instead of trying to be everywhere, focus on the platforms that align with your specific goals. Don’t just chase high engagement rates — consider how each platform fits your content objectives.

    2. Adapt your content format for each platform

    Each platform prioritizes different formats based on user behavior. Here’s how you can tailor your content:

    • LinkedIn is about conversation starters. Use long-form posts, carousels, and documents to encourage discussions and showcase expertise.
    • Instagram’s engagement is increasingly happening behind the scenes — so focus on Reels that generate saves and shares, not just likes.
    • TikTok favors content that keeps people watching. Go for quick hooks and engaging narratives that are visually compelling from the start.
    • Pinterest excels with evergreen content that gets better over time. High-quality visuals, step-by-step guides, and search-optimized content will perform best here.

    Takeaway: Tailor your content to the platform—what works on Instagram doesn’t necessarily work on LinkedIn. Focus on creating platform-first content that aligns with user expectations and engagement behaviors.

    3. Fine-tune your posting strategy for maximum engagement

    Engagement isn’t just about what you post — it’s about when and how often you post. Each platform rewards different posting behaviors, so optimizing your frequency is key.

    • For LinkedIn and Facebook: Focus on quality over quantity. Posts that sustain engagement over time tend to do better, so one well-crafted post a few times a week can be enough.
    • For Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts: These platforms thrive on frequency. Post daily to increase visibility and maintain engagement, but always prioritize quality content that resonates with your audience.
    • For Threads and X: Engage in real-time conversations — post multiple times a day if possible, but engage actively with others’ content to build a community.

    Takeaway: Match your posting frequency to the platform’s algorithm. Some platforms reward quality posts over consistency (LinkedIn, Facebook), while others, like TikTok and Instagram, reward daily posts that build momentum.

    Play to the strengths of each platform

    A high engagement rate doesn’t automatically mean a platform is the right fit for you. What matters most is how well a platform aligns with your goals — whether that’s visibility, deep engagement, video performance, or real-time interaction.

    Instead of trying to be everywhere at once, focus on the platforms that play to your strengths and audience behaviors. Adapt your content format, posting strategy, and engagement approach to work with the strengths of each platform rather than against them.

  • The Best Time to Post on Instagram in 2025: We Analyzed 2 Million+ Posts to Find Out

    The Best Time to Post on Instagram in 2025: We Analyzed 2 Million+ Posts to Find Out

    We analyzed more than 2 million Instagram posts sent through Buffer to pinpoint the best time, day, and post format for maximum reach. The Best Time to Post on Instagram in 2025: We Analyzed 2 Million+ Posts to Find Out

    There are many factors to consider when it comes to posting on Instagram — but the one that often feels like a make-or-break decision is what time to post your content.

    It's a fair concern — the last thing you want is to spend the time and resources needed to create a showstopper piece of content only to post it in a social media dead zone that results in… crickets.

    Sharing Instagram Storiesreels, feed posts, and carousels at optimal times for reach and engagement is an important consideration in your social media strategy. If your content immediately makes it to your target audience's feed while they're around to engage with it, it's more likely to succeed.

    That's why we combed through the reach of over 2 million Instagram posts sent through Buffer over the past year: to uncover which days and times are more likely to yield engagement (along with which post formats get the most likes, comments, and shares).

    In other words, the best times to post on Instagram, backed by data.

    With all that in mind, let's dig into everything you need to know about when you should be posting on Instagram — including how to figure out the best time for your audience, whether you're a marketer, creator, influencer, or casual Instagrammer.

    Schedule your Instagram posts, carousels, stories, and reels with Buffer: Visually plan your content calendar and make your profile a "must-follow" with Buffer's suite of Instagram scheduling tools.

    Is there a best time to post on Instagram?

    Let's get this out of the way before we begin: There's no universal best time to post on Instagram for guaranteed success — if only it were that easy.

    However, our analysis showed us that there are certain days and times that tend to yield more reach than others. What was really interesting was the patterns we uncovered, too — for example, most weekdays see similar high-reach times.

    So, while Instagram timing, or post recency, is not as crucial as it once was (R.I.P. chronological feed), it's still important to consider when developing your social media marketing strategy and determining when to post content.

    How we ca

  • 28 AI Marketing Tools to Save Time and Boost Performance

    28 AI Marketing Tools to Save Time and Boost Performance

    Streamline your workflow, enhance your strategy, and boost results with 28 AI marketing tools — perfect for small businesses and ambitious marketers.28 AI Marketing Tools to Save Time and Boost Performance

    Artificial intelligence is transforming digital marketing by empowering us to do our best work.

    The right AI marketing tools will help you automate repetitive tasks, make data-driven decisions, and unblock your creativity. They ultimately let us get back to the work we find more meaningful, like strategy, creativity, innovation, and relationship-building.

    The shift to AI-powered marketing has been dramatic. According to Hubspot, 74% of marketers now use AI in their roles, compared to just 21% in 2023. But with so many options available, it can be overwhelming to figure out which tools are worth your time and budget.

    In this guide, I'll introduce you to 28 of the best AI marketing tools that can help you work smarter across every marketing channel. Whether you're looking to automate marketing tasks, scale personalization, or increase your bandwidth, you'll find tools here to help.

    Social media AI tools

    Want to streamline your social media workflow? These social media marketing tools have AI features that can help you create social media content faster and understand your audience better.

    Buffer: Create social media posts and ideas

    28 AI Marketing Tools to Save Time and Boost Performance

    Buffer (hi! 👋) is a social media management platform with an AI Assistant that helps you create more engaging content in less time.

    Our data shows that posts created with AI Assistant get 22% higher engagement than non-AI-assisted posts.

    Here's what Buffer's AI Assistant can do:

    • Generate ideas based on your niche and audience
    • Write posts from a prompt
    • Edit posts to perfection — including rephrasing, expanding, shortening, and changing the tone of your content
    • Repurpose content for different platforms, taking specific platform norms into account

    I personally use the rephrase option the most to help turn idea brain dumps into concise and compelling posts.

    Beyond the AI features, Buffer is a really flexible social media management tool that lets you create, schedule, and manage social media content across channels.

    Pricing: Free plan available for up to three social channels. Paid plans start at $6/month/

  • New Year, New Habits: Build Your Creative Consistency in 30 Days with Creator Camp

    New Year, New Habits: Build Your Creative Consistency in 30 Days with Creator Camp

    Join us for 30 days, starting January 15 to post consistently to social media!New Year, New Habits: Build Your Creative Consistency in 30 Days with Creator Camp

    With each new year, come new possibilities. You’ve probably already set goals to tap into that fresh energy that comes with a change of the calendar. If one of those goals is to grow on social media in 2025, you’re in the right place.

    We believe new habits take work — and content creation is no exception. It’s not as easy as picking up a phone, despite what some success stories might have you believe. You need systems and structures to build something sustainable.

    That’s where Creator Camp comes in.

    Creator Camp is a free 30-day community challenge to help you build consistent social media habits while developing your brand and connecting with fellow creators.

    We had over 218 signups for our last edition, which ran in October 2024. For 30 days, the community buzzed with activity as members shared their content, exchanged feedback, and cheered each other on.

    And the results spoke for themselves —

    • Laura, a former Product Manager who is building a business, saw a 47.8% increase in impressions and a 20% increase in members reached.
    • Louise, a Social Media Manager, saw an 891% increase in impressions and a 346% increase in engagement.
    • Sabreen, a Marketing expert, saw a 216% increase in impressions and a 215% increase in engagement.

    Buffer teammates who participated in the challenge also saw amazing results. On my end, I saw amazing results, including viral content that bumped my 2024 LinkedIn metrics by thousands!

    Ready to tap into the New Year energy and grow on social in 2025? Join us on January 15!

    Why join Creator Camp?

    Creator Camp provides the structure, support, and community to make posting a habit. Here’s what you’ll get out of it:

    • Build a consistent posting habit: Creator Camp helps you turn infrequent posting into a regular habit by providing regular cues, motivation, and the reward of celebrating alongside a community. By the end of the 30 days, you’ll have built a natural and sustainable rhythm to carry into your creator journey.
    • Boost your creativity: With weekly content prompts, resources for all the top social platforms, and the encouragement of a supportive community, you’ll find yourself brimming with new ideas and excited to share them. And even if you’ve done Creator Camp before, we guarantee you’ll find something new to benefit from in
  • Crossposting 101: Everything You Need to Know to Crosspost on Social Media Effectively

    Crossposting 101: Everything You Need to Know to Crosspost on Social Media Effectively

    Learn what crossposting is and how to effectively share your content across multiple social media platforms to boost your online presence.Crossposting 101: Everything You Need to Know to Crosspost on Social Media Effectively

    Building your presence across multiple social media platforms is incredibly valuable for brands and creators — but it doesn't have to mean spending all day creating unique content for each channel.

    In fact, many successful creators and brands have a secret: they crosspost across platforms to get more mileage out of their content. Our data shows this approach is remarkably common — 59% of posts created in Buffer are posted to more than one social media platform.

    Crossposting a game-changer for busy creators and small businesses who want to maintain an active presence on social media without burning out. Instead of starting from scratch for every platform, you can adapt and share content across different channels — like turning an engaging Instagram Reel into a TikTok or turning an X thread into a LinkedIn post.

    Whether you're looking to streamline your processes or test out new channels, this guide will teach you how to crosspost effectively — from choosing which content to share across platforms to customizing your posts for maximum impact on each channel.

    What is crossposting?

    Crossposting is when you share the same (or similar) content on multiple social media accounts.

    For example, musician Ren shares his videos on Instagram Reels, as seen here:

  • How to Run Ads on TikTok: A Step-By-Step Guide to TikTok Advertising

    How to Run Ads on TikTok: A Step-By-Step Guide to TikTok Advertising

    This article takes you through everything you need to know to run TikTok ads and implement a solid advertising strategy.How to Run Ads on TikTok: A Step-By-Step Guide to TikTok Advertising

    Your TikTok account is hitting off. You aren’t getting the cold sweats while publishing TikTik videos nowadays. And then, you wonder, how can I get more out of my TikTok strategy?

    Enter: TikTok ads. A TikTok ad is an advertisement by a brand or creator appearing on people’s For You page. For example, I got the following ad by Adobe Photoshop on my feed recently:

    How to Run Ads on TikTok: A Step-By-Step Guide to TikTok Advertising

    While the TikTok ad blended seamlessly with the other TikTok videos on my feed, the “sponsored” label and the “Learn more” call-to-action button were the differentiators.

    TikTok users can customize their ads a lot, including whether they want to use branded content or user generated content, video or carousel, bidding strategy, etc. There’s a lot more to these simple TikTok ads than meets the eye. In this article, we’ll cover all of it so you can advertise on TikTok with confidence.

    But first…

    Should you advertise on TikTok?

    TikTok ads cost money. Is it worth it? The answer solely depends on:

    • Whether or not you have your target buyers looking to buy the products you sell on TikTok
    • Whether TikTok advertising fits your overall social media strategy and budget

    Here are some facts to help you decide:

    • A majority of TikTok comprises a younger generation (GenZ and Alpha), although that doesn’t mean that older populations aren’t using the popular social media site.
    • 56 percent of TikTok users in the U.S. have said they’ve purchased products promoted on TikTok, and another 36 percent said they haven’t bought anything yet, but are open to doing so.
    • TikTok thrives on entertaining, short-form, and creative content. If your products have a visual appeal or an interactive component, they’ll work great for TikTok.

    In conclusion: TikTok ads are a brilliant investment for creators and small businesses selling products that fit into its natural format. If you can show your products in action and combine it with entertaining storytelling, go ahead and start creating your TikTok ad.

    If you’re unsure, it’s always wise to first test the reception of your account organically. Are you meeting your ideal customers naturally on the platform? If yes, it might be worth it to test TikTok ads