At the end of 2025, we wrote about the rise of the Slow Social Era – the idea that audiences are becoming more intentional with how they consume content.

Less scrolling.
Less reacting.
Less engaging for the sake of it.

Now, there’s real data to back it up.

Engagement is declining across major platforms

A new report from Buffer analysed 191,000+ accounts and millions of posts across 2025.

And the findings showed engagement dropped on Instagram, LinkedIn and Threads.

At the same time:

  • TikTok stayed relatively flat
  • Facebook and Pinterest saw slight increases
  • X saw a small lift (but from a very low base)

So if you’ve been looking at your numbers of Q1 2026 thinking “something feels off”…

You’re not imagining it.

But this isn’t a platform problem

It’s easy to blame:

  • Algorithm changes
  • Platform updates
  • “Shadow banning”

But that’s not really what’s happening.

This is a behaviour shift.

We’re producing more content than ever before, and at the same time, people are becoming more selective with their attention.

More content + less attention = lower engagement.

Simples.

This is exactly what the Slow Social Era predicted

When we first talked about Slow Social, we made a key point:

The more content that exists, the harder it becomes for any single piece to matter.

That’s now playing out in real time.

  • LinkedIn is more saturated than ever
  • Threads is growing rapidly (and getting noisier)
  • Instagram is prioritising Reels, shifting how people engage

Therefore, engagement is being diluted across more content.

The real insight marketers should pay attention to

Buried in the Buffer report is the most important takeaway:

Brands that reply to comments see significantly higher engagement.

  • +42% on Threads
  • +30% on LinkedIn
  • +21% on Instagram

That’s not a small lift. That’s a strategy shift.

It reinforces that: Social media is no longer about broadcasting. It’s about participation.

The brands still treating social like a content distribution channel are the ones feeling the drop the most.

What’s actually working right now?

The data also gives us some tactical direction:

  • Instagram: Reels get more reach, but carousels drive more engagement
  • LinkedIn: Carousels outperform video and static posts by up to 3x
  • X: Engagement is still extremely low overall (despite a slight increase)

But none of this matters if the content itself doesn’t resonate.

Because relevance beats everything.

So what should marketers do in 2026?

1. Stop chasing engagement as a vanity metric

Lower engagement doesn’t always mean worse performance, it often reflects a more competitive environment.

2. Focus on depth, not volume

Fewer posts. More intentional thinking. Higher quality.

3. Prioritise conversation, not just content

Reply to comments. Start discussions. Build interaction loops.

4. Create content people want to spend time with

Not just scroll past.

5. Build owned audiences

Email, communities, direct channels – because discovery is getting harder..

The winning move in 2026 isn’t to speed up.

It’s to slow down, and create something worth engaging with.

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