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Social media planning

Free visual lesson · about 5 minutes · short quiz at the end

ccPlanning academy · channel planning

Social media planning

The only channel where every other customer is watching how you reply.

The big idea

It’s public — so the stakes per contact are different.

A bad phone call is heard by one person. A bad public reply, or a complaint left unanswered, is seen by thousands and can escalate into a reputational incident. Social planning isn’t just about volume — it’s about protecting the brand in front of an audience.

Spiky & viral

Volume that doesn’t obey your forecast.

Most days social volume is modest and forecastable. Then an outage, a viral post or a PR event sends it up 50× in an hour. The planning challenge isn’t the steady state — it’s having a surge capacity and escalation plan for the spike you can’t predict.

The public/private split

Two jobs on one channel.

Public replies (managing the visible thread, holding the line, taking it to DM) and private resolution (the actual fix, in messages) are different work with different skills and pace. Plan and often staff them separately — the public-facing role is part comms, part service.

Different SLAs

Speed-to-acknowledge, not handle time.

What matters most is how fast you publicly acknowledge — a quick “we’re on it, DM us” defuses far more than a perfect answer two hours later. Targets are response-time-to-first-reply and sentiment, not AHT or seconds-to-answer. The clock the audience judges is the acknowledgement clock.

Coverage windows

The public doesn’t keep office hours.

Complaints land at 11pm and at weekends, and an unanswered public post overnight looks worse than an unanswered email. Social coverage often needs to extend beyond core hours — with at least monitoring-and-escalate cover when full staffing isn’t justified.

How to plan it

Baseline staff + a surge playbook.

Forecast and staff the everyday baseline modestly, then invest in the surge plan: who gets pulled in, how fast, the pre-approved holding messages, the escalation path to comms/PR. For social, the plan that matters most is the one for the day your forecast is useless.

Plan the day the forecast dies

50× in an hour — have you a plan?

Tuesday: 40 mentions, easily handled by one agent. Wednesday 2pm: an outage, a screenshot goes viral, 2,000 mentions in an hour — many public, all watched by everyone else. No forecast saw it; no roster covers it.

What saves you isn’t baseline staffing — it’s a surge playbook: who’s pulled in, the pre-approved holding message, the path to comms. For social, plan for the spike, not the average.

The takeaway

Plan for the spike and the audience, not the average.

Social is public, reputational and viral-prone. Split public-facing from private resolution, target speed-to-acknowledge and sentiment over handle time, extend coverage windows, and put your real planning effort into a surge-and-escalation playbook for the unpredictable spike.

Now test yourself ↓

1 / 8

Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.

In depth: the only channel where everyone watches your reply

A bad phone call is heard by one person; a bad public reply, or a complaint left unanswered, is seen by thousands and can escalate into a reputational incident. So social planning isn’t just about volume — it’s about protecting the brand in front of an audience, which changes the stakes per contact and the metrics you plan against.

Spiky, public, and dual-natured

Most days social volume is modest and forecastable; then an outage, a viral post or a PR event sends it up fiftyfold in an hour, so the planning challenge isn’t the steady state but having surge capacity and an escalation plan for the spike you can’t predict. It’s also two jobs on one channel: public replies (managing the visible thread, holding the line, taking it to DM) and private resolution (the actual fix in messages) are different work with different skills and pace, often planned and staffed separately, with the public-facing role part comms and part service. And the metric is different — what matters most is speed-to-acknowledge, because a quick “we’re on it, DM us” defuses far more than a perfect answer two hours later, so you target response-time-to-first-reply and sentiment, not AHT or seconds-to-answer.

Coverage and the surge plan

The public doesn’t keep office hours: complaints land at 11pm and at weekends, and an unanswered public post overnight looks worse than an unanswered email, so social coverage often extends beyond core hours with at least monitor-and-escalate cover when full staffing isn’t justified. The way to plan it is a modest everyday baseline plus real investment in the surge plan — who gets pulled in and how fast, the pre-approved holding messages, the escalation path to comms and PR. For social, the plan that matters most is the one for the day your forecast is useless.

The principle to remember: plan for the spike and the audience, not the average. Split public-facing from private resolution, target speed-to-acknowledge and sentiment over handle time, extend coverage windows, and put your real effort into a surge-and-escalation playbook.

Quick quiz

Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.

1. Why are the stakes per contact different on social?

Planning social is partly about protecting the brand in front of an audience, not just volume.

2. What’s the core planning challenge on social?

Most days are forecastable; the challenge is the 50× spike you can’t predict.

3. What is the public/private split?

They’re different skills and pace — often planned and staffed separately.

4. What SLA matters most on social?

A fast ‘we’re on it, DM us’ defuses more than a perfect answer two hours later.

5. Where should the real planning effort go for social?

Staff the baseline modestly; invest in who gets pulled in, holding messages, and the PR escalation path.