Social media marketing is focused on growth and lead generation, while social media management is the day-to-day work of keeping your accounts active, consistent, and responsive.
Think of management as “keeping the lights on” and marketing as “driving measurable business outcomes.” In Orlando, we see a lot of local businesses post regularly and still not get calls, because posting alone is management, not a plan tied to bookings, inquiries, or revenue.
| Area | Social media management | Social media marketing |
|---|---|---|
| Main goal | Consistency, brand consistency, and healthy community interactions | Reach the right people and turn attention into leads or sales |
| Typical work | Content scheduling, captions, basic design support, replying to comments and DMs, review monitoring, basic reporting | Campaign planning, offer and funnel planning, targeting, creative testing, conversion tracking, landing page coordination, deeper reporting |
| Paid ads | Usually not included, or only light “boosting” support | Often included, especially Meta and TikTok ads |
| What you measure | Posting cadence, response time, engagement, follower growth | Leads, booked appointments, cost per lead, return on ad spend, revenue from campaigns |
| Timeline | Ongoing weekly workflow | Ongoing, plus campaign cycles and testing windows |
Here’s a practical way to tell what you need. If your biggest problem is “we never post” or “no one answers DMs,” you need management. If your biggest problem is “we need more booked consults, inspections, patients, or calls,” you need marketing, because that requires intentional offers, audience targeting, and a measurement setup that connects social activity to real results.
For example, a Central Florida pest control company can post tips all month and still miss calls if posts never push to a clear service, a simple booking path, or seasonal demand (like termite activity in spring and storm-related issues during hurricane season). A dental practice may need tight community management, but marketing work is what turns promotions like Invisalign, implants, or emergency appointments into scheduled patients without attracting the wrong inquiries.
In real life, most businesses need both, and the split depends on your goals and budget. When we run social media marketing services, we still treat management as the foundation, because great ads and campaigns do not work well if your profile looks inactive or your inbox goes unanswered.
One common overlap point is paid social. If you plan to run Meta campaigns, you’ll usually want the marketing side handled by someone who also understands tracking and landing pages. If your plan includes ads, our PPC team can support paid social setups when the goal is lead volume and measurable cost control.
If you want to go a level deeper on definitions, start with what social media marketing is, then review what community management means so you know exactly what “management” includes on paper.
If you tell us your main goal (more calls, more booked appointments, more foot traffic, or better retention), we’ll recommend the right split between management tasks and marketing work, so you are paying for outcomes, not just posting.