Every founder has been told "you need to be on social media." Most are doing it wrong. This post is the honest playbook for each major platform in 2026 โ what each is good for, what content works there, and where you'll waste time if you misread the platform.
The cardinal principle
Be a contributor first, marketer last. Every platform punishes people who arrive only to sell. The pattern that works on every platform: spend 80% of your activity adding value to the community, 20% on your own product. Reverse the ratio and you'll be ignored at best, banned at worst.
Reddit โ high-quality, high-stakes
Reddit is where niche communities of obsessives live. Done right, it drives the highest-quality traffic in tech. Done wrong, your account gets banned and your domain blacklisted.
What works:
- Genuinely useful posts that solve a problem. "I built a tool to solve X" with the post focused on the problem, not the product.
- Long-form posts (Reddit users read).
- Detailed comments on others' posts that demonstrate expertise.
- "Show Reddit"-style posts in
r/SideProject,r/iOSProgramming, the specific subreddit for your niche.
What fails:
- Promotional posts in general subreddits.
- Pasting the same post in many subs.
- Self-promotion without a track record of real contribution.
- Pretending not to be the author of the thing you're posting.
Rule of thumb: if your karma is low and you've posted nothing but links to your own product, the community will pattern-match and ignore (or downvote) you.
X (Twitter) โ for builders
X is the dominant platform for tech, founders, and AI in 2026. Real audiences exist. Algorithm rewards engagement and reply chains.
What works:
- "Build in public" posts — your journey, your wins and losses, your numbers.
- Useful thread on a topic you know well.
- Visual content — screenshots, charts, demos.
- Quote-tweeting with thoughtful additions.
- Replying to bigger accounts with substance (gets you visibility).
- One coherent topic over time — let people know what they'll get from following you.
What fails:
- Posting only to announce your product.
- Generic motivational content ("Hustle. Grind. Ship.").
- Begging for engagement.
- "Like and RT for a chance to win" without substance.
Cadence: 2-5 posts per day works without burning out. Reply 10-20x to others' posts. Compounds slowly. Most accounts see meaningful growth at month 6-12.
TikTok โ short-form video
TikTok in 2026 still has the most viral potential per post of any platform. Algorithm doesn't care about your follower count โ your hook matters.
What works:
- 15-30 second videos with a strong hook in the first 1.5 seconds.
- Vertical 9:16 native format.
- Pattern: "Here's the problem [show it] โ Here's the solution [show app] โ Here's why it works [explain] โ Try it [link in bio]."
- Trending sounds in the background (algorithmically promoted).
- Casual, raw production โ overproduced content underperforms.
See our dedicated Viral Video Guide for the structure.
Instagram โ visual / lifestyle
Instagram in 2026 is split between Reels (TikTok-style short-form), Stories (ephemeral), and feed posts. The platform leans visual and lifestyle.
What works for apps:
- Reels (same content as TikTok works; cross-post).
- Carousels (10-image scrolling posts) for tutorials and tips.
- Stories with polls and Q&A stickers to engage your audience.
- Beautiful screenshots, well-lit physical contexts (someone using your app).
What fails: text-heavy posts, unpolished visuals, generic motivational content.
YouTube โ long-form authority
YouTube is the most compounding platform โ a good video drives traffic for years. It's also the highest production effort.
Two ways to play YouTube:
- Shorts (60s vertical) — same content as TikTok. Cross-post.
- Long-form (8-20 min) — tutorial, deep dive, build-in-public storytelling.
What works:
- Clear thumbnail + compelling title (the click-through driver).
- First 30 seconds hook viewers with the value prop.
- Structure: hook โ preview the answer โ deliver โ recap โ CTA.
- Show, don't just tell — screen recordings of your app in action.
- Consistency — weekly upload cadence for at least 3 months before judging traction.
LinkedIn โ B2B and credibility
LinkedIn in 2026 is where business buyers and recruiters look. If your audience is professionals, this matters. If it's consumers, less so.
What works:
- Personal-narrative posts that frame business lessons.
- Industry analysis ("I've watched 50 AI consulting projects launch; here's what works").
- Carousels with practical frameworks.
- Replying thoughtfully on others' posts.
For djEnterprises specifically: LinkedIn is high-leverage for the AI consulting side. Less relevant for game-companion app discovery.
Facebook in 2026 is older demographics and Group communities. The feed feels declining for tech audiences, but Groups still have engaged niches (parenting apps, hobby communities, regional groups).
What works:
- Posting in relevant Groups (with the group's permission — rules vary).
- Targeted Facebook Ads if your audience is on the platform.
For most indie iOS apps: Facebook organic is rarely worth the time. Facebook Ads can work for specific demographic targeting if your unit economics support paid acquisition.
Discord โ engaged communities
Discord servers for specific niches (game communities, dev communities, hobby communities) are some of the most engaged audiences on the internet. Same rules as Reddit: contribute first, share your product when the moderators allow it and it's genuinely relevant.
Niche communities & forums
Beyond the majors, every category has its own watering holes:
- Lobste.rs for systems / programming
- Hacker News for tech launches
- Product Hunt for product launches
- Genre-specific forums (RDR2 has dedicated forums, Reddit subs, Discord servers)
- Substack-adjacent communities (newsletters with discussion threads)
Channel sequencing for indies
- Pick one platform to be visible on regularly. Where your audience hangs out. For djEnterprises that's X. For a fitness app it might be Instagram. For a gaming companion it's Reddit + YouTube.
- Pick one short-form video platform. TikTok or YouTube Shorts. Cross-post to Instagram Reels.
- Be a presence in 2-3 niche communities (Reddit subs, Discord servers).
- Ignore the rest for now. Five platforms done poorly underperforms three done well.
Common social media failure modes
- "Spray and pray" posting — same content on every platform without adaptation. Each platform has native conventions.
- Outsourcing to a generic SMM agency — they post generic content; engagement is zero.
- Buying followers — useless and detectable.
- Engagement bait — "Comment YES if you agree!" Algorithms detect and de-rank.
- Inconsistency — 2 weeks of activity, then 6 weeks silent. The algorithm forgets you.
- Measuring vanity metrics instead of conversion to your actual goal (installs, leads).
- Aggressive self-promotion when you haven't earned the right yet.
The patient, consistent, genuinely contributing approach wins on every platform. The shortcut paths fail on all of them.