The straight answer: no direct boost, real indirect lift
Let's kill the confusion first. When people ask whether social media helps SEO, they usually mean one thing: will more Facebook followers or Instagram likes make my business rank higher on Google? The honest answer is no — not directly.
Google has said that social signals — your follower count, likes, shares — are not a direct ranking factor. Your Facebook page isn't feeding a number into Google's algorithm that lifts your position in the map pack or the blue links. If someone tells you buying followers will fix your rankings, walk away.
But that's not the end of the story, and treating it that way costs Virginia business owners real customers. Social media influences a whole chain of things Google absolutely does care about: how many people search your business by name, how much traffic hits your website, how many links and mentions you earn, and how often your content gets seen and shared by people who can link to it.
Think of it this way. Social media isn't the engine of your SEO — it's the fuel line. It doesn't turn the crank itself, but starve it and the whole thing runs rough. For a shop in Roanoke, a contractor in the New River Valley, or a service business in Hillsville, the indirect lift is where the money is. The rest of this guide walks through exactly how that lift happens and what to do about it.
How social media indirectly feeds your rankings
Here's the mechanism, step by step, so you can see where the value comes from.
- Referral traffic. A post that sends people to your website puts real humans on your pages. Traffic isn't a magic ranking button, but pages that get visited, read, and clicked around tend to perform better over time.
- Branded search. When people see your name on Facebook or Instagram, a chunk of them later Google "[your business] Christiansburg" or "[your business] near me." Branded searches are one of the strongest trust signals a local business can build — they tell Google you're a real, known entity in your area.
- Link and mention discovery. Bloggers, local news sites, and other businesses often find you on social before they link to you or write about you. Those links are a genuine ranking factor, and social is frequently the first touchpoint.
- Content distribution. Google can't rank a great blog post nobody sees. Social gets your content in front of the handful of people who share it, link to it, or reference it — which is how content earns authority.
- Faster discovery. Links posted publicly can help Google find new pages sooner, so fresh content gets crawled and indexed faster.
None of these is Google reading your like count. Every one is Google reacting to real behavior that social media set in motion. That's the difference between a direct and an indirect ranking factor — and for local businesses, indirect wins are still wins.
The practical takeaway: judge your social effort by whether it produces those behaviors, not by vanity numbers. A post that sends fifteen people to your site and earns one review does more for your rankings than a post that collects two hundred likes and drives nobody anywhere. Keep your eye on traffic, searches, links, and reviews — the outputs Google actually responds to.
Your social profiles rank — and that's SEO too
Here's an angle most "social doesn't help SEO" arguments miss entirely: your social profiles are web pages, and they can rank in Google.
Search your own business name right now. On the first page, you'll often see your website, your Google Business Profile, and then your Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or YouTube pages. That's valuable real estate. A complete, active social profile can occupy a first-page slot that would otherwise go to a competitor, a directory, or a stale listing that hurts you.
For a Virginia local business, this matters for reputation and trust. When a homeowner in Wytheville is deciding whether to call you, they click around that first page of results. If your Facebook page is filled out, posts recently, and shows real work and real reviews, it reinforces that you're legitimate and active. An abandoned page with three posts from 2019 does the opposite.
Practical moves that actually help here:
- Fill out every profile completely — real name, address, phone, hours, website link, and category. Keep your business name, address, and phone identical to your website and Google Business Profile.
- Write a plain, honest description — what you do and where you serve — without keyword stuffing.
- Post consistently enough that the page looks alive. Recency signals legitimacy to a human even when it isn't a Google ranking factor.
Owning more of page one is a real, defensible outcome — and your social profiles are some of the easiest pieces to claim. It costs you nothing but the time to fill them out properly and keep them current.
Where social really moves the needle for local businesses
For a local service business in Virginia, the biggest wins from social media aren't abstract algorithm points — they're the two things Google's local system actually weighs heavily: reviews and brand presence in your service area.
Reviews. Social is one of the most natural places to nudge customers toward leaving a Google review. A quick post thanking a customer, a photo of a finished job, a comment reply pointing someone to your review link — these turn happy clients into public proof. Review quantity, quality, and recency are real local ranking factors, and social is a low-friction way to keep them flowing. If reviews are a weak spot, pairing social with a real reputation management system compounds the effect.
Local relevance. When you post about a job in Floyd County, a booth at a Galax event, or a project in Pulaski, you build associations between your business and the places you serve. People from those towns engage, tag you, and search you — which strengthens your local footprint through real behavior, not through a like counter.
Repeat and referral demand. Local businesses live on repeat customers and word of mouth. Staying in front of past customers on social keeps you top of mind, and top of mind drives the branded searches and direct visits that quietly prop up your rankings.
None of this requires a big following or a daily posting grind. It requires posting the right things — real work, real customers, real places — and then routing the attention toward reviews and your website. If you want that handled as a system instead of a scattershot posting habit, that's exactly what our social media marketing service is built to do: tie social to the local SEO outcomes that bring in calls.
The mistakes that waste money and don't help SEO
Plenty of local businesses "do social media" and get nothing back — not more customers, and definitely not better rankings. Almost always it traces to one of these.
- Buying followers or likes. Fake followers do nothing for SEO and make your page look hollow to real prospects. There's no shortcut here.
- Posting into the void. Broadcasting sales pitches to an audience that never engages sends zero traffic and earns zero mentions. If nobody clicks or shares, there's no indirect lift to capture.
- Inconsistent name, address, and phone. If your Facebook lists an old address or a different phone than your website and Google Business Profile, you're confusing the local signals Google uses to trust you. Consistency across every profile is non-negotiable.
- Ignoring engagement. Comments and messages that go unanswered kill the exact behavior — clicks, conversations, branded searches — that makes social worth doing for SEO.
- Chasing every platform. A Virginia contractor doesn't need TikTok, Pinterest, and LinkedIn all half-maintained. One or two platforms done consistently beats five done badly.
The through-line: social helps SEO only when real people do real things because of your posts. Vanity metrics don't move Google, and they don't fill your calendar. If your current effort isn't producing traffic, reviews, or branded searches, it isn't producing SEO value either — and it's time to change the approach before you spend another dollar on it.
How to make social and SEO work together
You don't need to be everywhere or post daily. You need social and SEO pulling in the same direction. Here's a realistic setup for a local Virginia business.
- Pick one or two platforms and own them. For most local service businesses, that's Facebook plus one of Instagram, Google Business Profile posts, or YouTube — wherever your customers already are.
- Post the work. Real jobs, real before-and-afters, real local landmarks. This builds local relevance and gives people a reason to engage and search you.
- Share every piece of content you publish. New blog post or service page? Put it in front of your audience so it has a chance to earn traffic, links, and shares. This is how content marketing and social reinforce each other.
- Route social into reviews. Make asking for a Google review a normal part of how you use social after a completed job.
- Keep every profile consistent. Same name, address, phone, and link everywhere — matched to your website and Google Business Profile.
- Reply to everything. Comments, messages, tags. Engagement is the behavior that feeds the indirect signals.
Done this way, social stops being a chore that goes nowhere and becomes a feeder system for traffic, reviews, and brand searches — the things that genuinely support local rankings. If you'd rather have it built and run as part of a real local SEO plan instead of a separate box to check, that's what our social media marketing work is for. You'll get a written proposal that spells out what we'd do and what it costs — no guesswork, no lock-in.