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What Is the Best Social Media Platform for a Small Business in Metro Detroit?

2026 Guide 12 min read Lakeside Creative Labs

The best social media platform for your small business depends on your industry, but here is the short answer: most local service businesses in Metro Detroit should start with Facebook. Restaurants, salons, and barbers should start with Instagram. TikTok is almost never the right first platform for a local business. Below, we break down exactly which platform fits your business type so you can stop guessing and start posting where it actually matters.

Here's the problem with most "Facebook vs. Instagram vs. TikTok" articles online: they end with "it depends on your business." That's not an answer. That's a punt. You're a small business owner in Macomb County with maybe five hours a week for marketing. You need someone to pick one.

So that's what we're going to do. For your specific business type, we'll tell you the platform that matters, the one that's optional, and the one you can skip entirely. No hedging.

And before we get into it: 68% of small business owners say social media drives the most value for their business, according to a January 2026 Constant Contact survey of 1,500+ small businesses. This isn't a side project anymore. If you're still wondering whether your small business even needs social media, the data says yes. But the platform you choose matters more than whether you show up at all.

How Do Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok Compare for Local Businesses?

Facebook offers the strongest local discovery and lowest time investment for Metro Detroit service businesses, averaging 5-6 hours per month. Instagram requires more visual effort (6-8 hours) but excels for food, beauty, and portfolio-driven businesses. TikTok demands the most time (8-12 hours) and its algorithm does not prioritize local reach, making it the weakest choice for brick-and-mortar businesses that depend on nearby customers.

Stylized Facebook icon illustration

Here's how the three platforms stack up for a local small business. Not a national brand. Not an influencer. A business with a door that opens onto a street in Sterling Heights or Clinton Township or Warren.

Feature Facebook Instagram TikTok
Best For Local service businesses, community engagement, events, reviews Visual businesses, portfolios, before/after, food, beauty Personality-driven brands, barbers, restaurants with flair
Core Audience Age 35-65+ 25-45 16-35
Content Type Text posts, photos, links, events, reviews Photos, Reels, Stories, carousels Short-form video only
Effort Level Low to medium. A photo and two sentences works. Medium. Needs decent visuals and some design sense. High. Every post is a video. Editing, audio, hooks.
ROI Timeline 1-3 months. Fast local reach, especially with groups. 2-4 months. Takes time to build a visual brand. Unpredictable. Could go viral day one or take six months.
Local Discovery Strong. Facebook Groups + Marketplace + check-ins. Moderate. Location tags and Explore page help. Weak. Algorithm-driven, not location-driven.
Monthly Time Needed 5-6 hours 6-8 hours 8-12 hours

That last row is the one most people miss. TikTok's algorithm doesn't care where you are. It shows your video to whoever it thinks will watch it. That's great if you're selling a product online. It's way less useful when you need the person three miles away to walk through your door on a Tuesday afternoon.

Should a Small Business Focus on One Social Media Platform or All Three?

A small business should focus on one social media platform first. Posting consistently to a single channel for 90 days builds more momentum than spreading thin across Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok simultaneously. Businesses that try to maintain three accounts at once typically produce sporadic, low-quality content on all of them, which performs worse than a single well-run profile.

One platform done well beats three platforms done poorly.

The single biggest mistake we see from small businesses in Macomb County is trying to be everywhere. They post the same content to Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok, and all three accounts look half-abandoned. Three accounts with sporadic content is worse than one account with consistent, quality posts.

Pick one. Own it. Post 3-4 times a week for 90 days. Build real momentum. Then, and only then, think about adding a second platform.

Here's the part where we tell you which one to pick.

Not sure which platform fits your business?

We'll audit your current social media presence, tell you what's working and what's not, and give you a clear recommendation. Takes about 15 minutes of your time.

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Which Social Media Platform Should Each Business Type Use?

Restaurants, nail salons, and barber shops should start with Instagram because their work is inherently visual. Auto body shops and home service businesses should start with Facebook and Google Business Profile, where customers actively search for local providers. Dental offices and med spas perform best on Instagram for before-and-after content paired with Facebook Ads for local reach. If you need ideas for your first posts, see our guide on what to post on social media as a small business.

Stylized Instagram camera illustration

We work with local businesses across Metro Detroit every day. Here's what we'd tell you if you sat down across from us and asked "where should I post?"

Restaurants & Cafes
Instagram first. Facebook second. TikTok if you have the energy.
Food is visual. Period. A well-lit photo of your signature dish does more selling than any caption ever will. Instagram is where people go to discover restaurants, browse menus through photos, and save places to try later. Facebook earns the second slot because it's still where Macomb County residents share restaurant recommendations in local groups, and it's where your regulars over 40 are most active. TikTok can be a bonus if you or your staff are naturally entertaining on camera, but don't force it. A restaurant in Shelby Township posting awkward trending audio clips is not going to move the needle.
Barber Shops
Instagram and TikTok. Facebook for the older crowd.
Barbershops are one of the few local businesses where TikTok genuinely works. A 15-second transformation video, a satisfying fade timelapse, the chair spin reveal: this content practically makes itself. Instagram is your portfolio and your booking funnel. Every fresh cut should live on your grid. Between the two, you'll cover ages 18-45 naturally. Facebook is worth maintaining for your clients over 45, but it's not where you'll grow. Start with Instagram, add TikTok when you've got a library of video clips, keep Facebook alive for the dads.
Auto Body & Collision Shops
Facebook and Google. Skip Instagram.
Nobody follows an auto body shop on Instagram for fun. When someone needs collision repair, they search Google, ask in a Facebook group, or check reviews. That's it. Your Google Business Profile is your most important asset. Keep it updated with photos of finished work, respond to every review, and post weekly updates. Facebook is your second priority because Macomb County community groups are full of "who does good body work near 16 Mile?" questions. You want your name in those threads. TikTok and Instagram are a waste of your shop's time.
Dental Offices & Med Spas
Instagram and Facebook. Skip TikTok.
Before-and-after transformations are your best marketing tool, and Instagram is built for them. Teeth whitening results, smile makeovers, Botox before-and-afters: this is the content that gets saved, shared, and turned into consultations. Facebook matters because your patients are there, your local community is there, and Facebook Ads for dental and medspa services still deliver some of the best local ROI in paid social. TikTok is a distraction. Your target demographic (30-60, with disposable income) isn't scrolling TikTok looking for a dentist. They're Googling "best dentist near me" and then checking your Instagram to see if the office looks modern and clean.
Nail Salons & Beauty
Instagram is everything.
This is the one business type where the answer is that clear. Nail art is inherently visual, highly shareable, and drives bookings directly from the platform. Every set you do is content. Every satisfied client walking out with a fresh set is a potential post. Your Instagram grid IS your portfolio, your menu, and your booking page all in one. Facebook is fine to maintain for older clients, but your growth and new client acquisition will come almost entirely from Instagram. TikTok nail art can go viral, but the viewers are usually other nail techs and teenagers, not paying clients in your zip code.

Do Google Business Profile Posts Help Small Businesses Get Found?

Here's a truth that might sting: your Google Business Profile is a social media platform, and it's probably the one driving the most actual revenue for your business.

When someone Googles "barber shop near me" or "best Italian restaurant Sterling Heights," your GBP listing is the first thing they see. Not your Instagram. Not your Facebook page. Your Google listing, with its photos, reviews, hours, and posts.

And yet almost nobody in Macomb County is posting to their Google Business Profile. Go look at your competitors right now. Pull up five of them on Google Maps. How many have posted an update in the last month? Probably one. Maybe zero.

GBP posts show up directly in search results. They tell Google your business is active. They give potential customers a reason to click on you instead of the listing below you. And they take about five minutes to create.

If you're only going to do one thing after reading this article, start posting to your Google Business Profile once a week. A photo from your shop, a quick update, a seasonal special. It's the lowest-effort, highest-return social media move a local business can make.

Can I Post the Same Content to Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok?

Cross-posting identical content to Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok is better than posting nothing, but each platform's algorithm penalizes non-native content. Facebook favors text-and-photo posts with community engagement. Instagram rewards high-quality visuals with hashtags. TikTok requires video with audio hooks. Adapting your message to each platform's format produces significantly better reach than a blanket copy-paste approach.

You're thinking it. "Can't I just post the same thing to all three and call it a day?"

You can. It's better than posting nothing. But it's not great.

A Facebook post that says "Come check out our new spring menu!" with a photo works fine on Facebook. That same post on Instagram needs a better photo, relevant hashtags, and a different caption tone. On TikTok, it needs to be a video. Cross-posting the exact same content signals to each platform's algorithm that you're not a native user, and they'll suppress your reach accordingly.

This is another reason to start with one platform. You learn what works there. You build a rhythm. You figure out what your audience responds to. Then you can adapt that playbook to a second platform with intention, not just copy-paste and hope.

Does TikTok Actually Drive Local Business Sales?

TikTok can generate views for local businesses, but those views rarely convert to foot traffic. The platform's algorithm distributes content nationally and internationally, not by proximity. A TikTok video with 50,000 views may reach fewer than 200 people in your zip code. For most Metro Detroit small businesses, a Facebook community group post with 40 local comments drives more revenue than a viral TikTok.

Stylized TikTok music note illustration

Maybe your competitor is killing it on TikTok. But look closer. How many followers do they have? How many of those followers are local? Are they actually getting bookings and sales from TikTok, or are they getting views from people in other states who will never walk through the door?

Vanity metrics are the trap of social media. 50,000 views on a TikTok sounds amazing until you realize 49,800 of those viewers live nowhere near Macomb County. Meanwhile, a Facebook post in the "Sterling Heights Community" group that gets 40 comments is driving real, local business.

Don't compare your behind-the-scenes to someone else's highlight reel. Compare revenue. Compare bookings. Compare the thing that actually pays your rent.

How Much Time Does Social Media Take for a Small Business?

Social media takes 5-12 hours per month for a small business, depending on the platform. Facebook requires approximately 5-6 hours monthly for three weekly posts and community engagement. Instagram needs 6-8 hours for photo-quality posts and Stories. TikTok demands 8-12 hours because every post requires video production. Google Business Profile is the most time-efficient option at 1-2 hours per month with the highest return per hour invested.

Let's be honest about the time commitment, because that's the real cost for a small business owner.

If you've got 5 hours a month for marketing, pick Facebook or Instagram (depending on your business type above) and spend one of those hours on GBP. That's it. That's the plan.

If you don't have that time, that's exactly what a local social media agency is for. We handle this starting at $297/month so you can get back to running your business. And if your website needs work too, that's worth sorting out before you start driving traffic to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best social media platform for a small business in Metro Detroit?
For most local service businesses, Facebook still delivers the highest ROI because of its local reach, review integration, and the 35-65 age demographic that drives most spending in Macomb County. If your business is visually driven (restaurants, salons, barbers), Instagram is your better starting point. The right answer depends on your specific business type, which is why we broke it down by vertical above.
Is TikTok worth it for a local small business in 2026?
For most local businesses, TikTok should be your third priority, not your first. It can generate massive visibility for barber shops and restaurants that produce short-form video naturally, but the audience skews younger and the algorithm doesn't prioritize local discovery. Master one platform first. If you're already consistent on Instagram or Facebook and have capacity for video content, then consider TikTok as a bonus channel.
Should my small business be on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok at the same time?
No. One platform done well beats three platforms done poorly. Pick the single platform that reaches your best customers, post consistently for 90 days, and only expand once that first channel is running smoothly. Spreading yourself across Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok is the fastest way to burn out and quit all three. Start with one. Get good at it. Then grow.
Do Google Business Profile posts help my local business get found?
Yes, and they might be the most underused social channel for local businesses. GBP posts show up directly in search results and Google Maps when someone is actively looking for your type of business. Most small businesses in Macomb County never post to their Google Business Profile, which means doing it even once a week puts you ahead of nearly every local competitor. It takes five minutes per post and directly influences whether someone calls you or scrolls past.
How much does social media management cost for a small business in Michigan?
In Michigan, social media management runs from $49/month (budget AI tools) to $5,000+/month (full-service national agencies). For a local small business in Macomb County, the sweet spot is $297-$800/month with a local agency that knows your area. We break down every tier in our full pricing guide.

Let us tell you exactly where to focus.

We'll look at your business, your competitors, and your current social presence. Then we'll give you a clear, no-nonsense recommendation: which platform, what to post, and how often. Plus sample content so you can see the quality before you spend anything.

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