Every marketing agency in 2026 will tell you that you need to be on social. Most of them are wrong, at least about your business. There are categories where social is the wrong investment, the wrong audience, and the wrong economics — and the right answer is to put the budget elsewhere.
Categories where social rarely pays
- Heavy B2B with long sales cycles to a small buyer pool (industrial services, specialty manufacturing). LinkedIn might earn its keep; everything else doesn’t.
- Hyper-local services where the buyer pool fits in two ZIP codes (some trades, some healthcare practices). Local SEO + GBP + reviews are dramatically more efficient.
- Categories with regulated advertising (legal, healthcare specifics). The compliance overhead often makes social ROI negative.
- Products with very high consideration and infrequent purchase (custom homes, large industrial equipment). Social is rarely the channel that closes the deal.
Where the budget should go instead
- SEO and Google Business Profile work. The buyers in these categories are searching, not scrolling.
- Content that proves expertise. Long-form, technical, written for the actual buyer.
- Email nurture for known leads. The long-cycle B2B sale runs on email, not social.
- Direct mail to a defined buyer list (industrial). Old-school, high-cost-per-touch, and shockingly effective for the right category.
- Trade press and partnership marketing.