Always-On Social Media Marketing: How to Stop Posting in Bursts
4 min read · Mar 18, 2025· AO Network Editorial Team

Always-on social media marketing means publishing on a continuous, predictable schedule across your owned social channels, with planned content and automated workflows behind it. Most brands say they do this. Almost none of them actually do.
I have looked at hundreds of B2B social calendars in the last year. The pattern is the same. Three weeks of nothing, then a launch week with twelve posts crammed into five days, then radio silence.
Why the burst model fails
The algorithms hate it. LinkedIn's feed model rewards consistent posters and penalizes accounts that go quiet then surge. The dwell-time data the team published last year backs this up. Accounts posting between three and five times a week saw nearly twice the reach of accounts posting in clusters.
Audiences hate it too. People do not remember the post you wrote three weeks ago. They follow accounts that show up in their feed regularly because that is how memory works.
Sales teams hate it the most. The number of times I have heard a rep ask their marketing team where the social content is that they were supposed to share with prospects this week. The answer is usually that there was not one this week.
What real always-on social looks like
Three pieces have to be in place.
1. Content pillars
Pick four or five themes and stick with them. For a marketing tools brand it might be product tips, customer wins, industry takes, team culture, and one curveball pillar like a CEO opinion column. Then every post belongs to a pillar.
This is the boring part nobody wants to do. It is also the difference between always-on and chaos.
2. A locked weekly cadence
Pick the number of posts per week per channel and never miss it. Not even during the launch week. Not even during the holiday week. Especially not during the holiday week, when your competition has gone quiet.
Three LinkedIn posts a week is a reasonable starting point for most B2B brands. Twice that for active categories. Once a day on TikTok if you are in B2C.
3. Automation that does not look automated
Use Buffer, Hootsuite, or Sprout Social to schedule. Use them. Most brand teams I talk to have the tools and still post manually because someone in legal got nervous about scheduled content. Get over it. Schedule.
The trick is to leave space for live posts. About 70% scheduled, 30% reactive to what is happening that week. Always-on does not mean rigid.
Measurement that actually tells you something
Stop measuring engagement rate as a vanity number. It tells you nothing about whether the channel is working.
The numbers that matter for always-on social are these.
- Consistent reach week over week. If reach is bouncing wildly, your cadence is broken.
- Follower velocity from cold prospects, not just industry peers.
- Branded search lift after 90 days of consistent posting. This is the one finance cares about.
- Sales-shared content rate. If reps are pulling your posts into their outreach, you are doing it right.
The brands actually doing it
Notion ships LinkedIn posts every weekday like clockwork. Their content team is small. The system is what makes it possible.
On the agency side, Workshop has built a small army of B2B followers on the back of posting daily takes from their founder. It is not a rocket science strategy. It is just doing the work.
Asana runs a tight always-on cadence across LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Their team has talked openly about treating the channel like a publication, with an editor and a deadline calendar.
What to do this week
Open your scheduler. Find every gap longer than three days in the next 90 days. Fill it with planned content from your pillars. That is most of the work. The rest is showing up.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a separate person for always-on social?
Not at the start. One person spending two days a month on scheduling and one day a week on reactive posts can run a real always-on social program for a B2B brand. You add headcount when you start running paid amplification on top.
How much should I post per channel?
LinkedIn: three to five times a week. Twitter or X: daily. Instagram: three to five times a week plus stories. TikTok: daily if you are in it at all. Threads and Bluesky: still experimental, treat them as bonus.
What if my industry is not very active on social?
Even better. Less competition for attention. The brands that build always-on programs in quiet industries get a disproportionate share of voice and it sticks.
How is your team handling cadence? I would read the answers if you share them.
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