Social media has undergone a seismic shift in the last decade. What began as an open, democratic environment where brands could authentically engage with their audiences has transformed into a complex, often expensive landscape dominated by algorithms, advertising, AI-driven content, and competitive bidding. For today’s businesses, especially those seeking to drive tangible results throughout the entire customer journey, rethinking their social media marketing (SMM) strategy is not just advisable—it’s essential.
Rather than treating social as a standalone marketing silo, brands must now design strategies that work across each phase of the customer journey—awareness, consideration, purchase, post-purchase loyalty—and that balance paid investment with algorithm-savvy organic engagement.
This guide lays out how to do just that.
Table of Contents
Rethinking the Social Customer JourneyPaid Social: Smarter And More SurgicalMastering Organic: Algorithms Are ComplexAI’s Double-Edged SwordSocial as the Top of Funnel—Email as the Relationship BuilderThe Role of Influencers: Shifting Away From CelebritiesPaid + Organic + Owned: The Integrated StrategyThe Strategic Questions for Every Brand
Rethinking the Social Customer Journey
No brand can afford to think of social media solely as an engagement channel or as a lead-generation (LeadGen) pipeline. It serves multiple roles, often simultaneously, at each stage of the customer experience:
Awareness: Where potential customers first encounter your brand through paid ads, viral content, influencer partnerships, or algorithmically surfaced posts.
Consideration: Where they evaluate your brand through reviews, customer stories, and deeper content experiences.
Purchase: Where they look for frictionless buying experiences, trust signals, and proof of value.
Loyalty & Advocacy: Where post-sale engagement fosters ongoing relationships, repurchases, and advocacy via user-generated content (UGC), testimonials, and referrals.
In short: your social strategy must be multi-dimensional and holistic.
Paid Social: Smarter And More Surgical
There is no getting around the fact that today’s social platforms are pay-to-play. But paying smarter matters. Brands that succeed with paid social are those who:
Micro-target audience segments: Instead of broad reach campaigns, use refined data sets to target micro-communities with personalized creative. Think beyond demographics—target based on psychographics, behaviors, and lifecycle stage.
Build full-funnel ad strategies: Do not treat ads as awareness-only or conversion-only. Construct multi-touch campaigns: introduce the brand, nurture with content, retarget based on intent signals, and close the sale with personalized offers.
Embrace performance transparency: Track not just CTR or impressions, but also deeper metrics—such as conversion rates, post-purchase behavior, and lifetime value (CLV) by source. Paid efforts should tie directly to measurable business outcomes.
Invest in creative differentiation: In an algorithm-dominated world, creativity matters more than ever. Use AI tools to generate variants, but prioritize testing with human-crafted, emotion-driven visuals and copy that breaks through the feed clutter.
Mastering Organic: Algorithms Are Complex
Yes, organic reach is down. But that does not mean organic content is useless. The organic game today is about knowing what types of content the platforms reward and shaping strategy accordingly:
Prioritize engagement rate over volume: A single highly engaging post will drive more long-term visibility than 10 low-interaction posts. Stop chasing quantity; focus on sparking meaningful comments, shares, and saves.
Lean into native formats: Platforms favor their formats—Reels on Instagram, Carousels on LinkedIn, Shorts on YouTube. Don’t force-fit old content types; embrace platform-native media.
Favor community interaction: Posts that generate conversation among users (not just likes) get algorithmic boosts. Encourage discussion, questions, and community storytelling.
Timing still matters: Platforms increasingly factor real-time engagement into feed ranking. Test and optimize posting times when your audience is most active—often during early weekday mornings or lunch hours.
UGC as organic fuel: User-generated content, when reposted with attribution, often outperforms brand-created content. Encourage and amplify UGC consistently.
AI’s Double-Edged Sword
AI now underpins most social platforms—from algorithmic ranking to audience profiling and even content generation.
Brands must:
Understand the trade-offs: Every post you make feeds AI systems that competitors may indirectly benefit from. Be judicious about what proprietary insights you share openly.
Use AI strategically: Leverage AI tools for copy optimization, creative testing, and identifying high-propensity audiences. AI is a tool—do not treat it as a threat alone.
Protect your IP: Where possible, watermark visual content and be mindful of the originality of text-based posts that can easily be scraped into AI models.
Social as the Top of Funnel—Email as the Relationship Builder
One of the most effective long-term strategies is to treat social as the awareness and discovery layer and email as the relationship and retention engine. In other words, use social media to:
Drive audiences into opt-in experiences (email newsletters, loyalty programs, webinars, gated content).
Build first-party (1P) data you control—not just vanity metrics on rented platforms.
Establish deeper connections where algorithms can’t interfere.
An owned email list remains one of the most valuable assets for resilience in an AI-augmented, ad-dominated social ecosystem.
The Role of Influencers: Shifting Away From Celebrities
Influencer marketing has matured:
The most effective partnerships today come from micro-influencers and niche community leaders, rather than macro-celebrities.
Peer credibility outweighs polished endorsements—raw, authentic, real-world stories from relatable voices drive conversion better than branded placements.
Brands should co-create with influencers, not dictate messaging. The result: content that feels native to audiences and performs better in feed algorithms.
Paid + Organic + Owned: The Integrated Strategy
A siloed social strategy is doomed to fail. The winning approach looks like this:
Paid social drives initial visibility and lead generation.
Organic social builds credibility and emotional resonance.
Owned channels (email, community platforms, websites) deepen relationships, capture first-party data, and sustain long-term value.
Treat each element as interconnected, not standalone.
The Strategic Questions for Every Brand
Before investing heavily in social this year, every brand should ask:
Are we paying smarter, not just paying more?
Do we understand what content types each platform now favors?
Are we protecting our proprietary insights and community data?
Are we using AI tools strategically, or are we using them passively?
Is our social effort integrated with our owned data and CRM?
Are we building relationships that outlast platform shifts?
In today’s social media environment, it’s no longer enough to have a presence. Brands must play offense—strategically navigating algorithmic hurdles, paying where it pays off, and prioritizing owned relationships over fleeting reach.
The result: a more resilient, effective social strategy that supports the full customer journey—not just vanity metrics.
©2025 DK New Media, LLC, All rights reserved | Disclosure
Originally Published on Martech Zone: The New Blueprint For Social Media Marketing Strategies in 2025