Let’s be honest. Facebook has had its fair share of “is it dying?” headlines over the years. And yet, here we are in 2025, and it is still one of the most powerful platforms available to marketers and businesses. Most brands are only scratching the surface of what Facebook can do for them. They post, they boost, they occasionally go Live, and then wonder why engagement has flatlined.
The problem is not Facebook. The problem is that most businesses are ignoring a whole toolkit of features sitting right there, waiting to be used. So let’s fix that.
The Engagement Problem Nobody Talks About
Reach on Facebook has changed dramatically. Organic content is harder to get in front of people than it used to be, and the algorithm rewards genuine interaction over passive scrolling. That means brands need to think beyond the standard post and pray approach.
Real engagement on Facebook in 2025 comes from understanding how people actually use the platform, not how marketers wish they would. And increasingly, that means leaning into the more personal, human features Facebook has always had baked in.
Facebook Stories: Still Underused, Still Powerful
If your business is not posting consistently to Facebook Stories, you are leaving visibility on the table. Stories sit at the top of the feed, above everything else. Prime real estate, and most brands either ignore them entirely or repurpose Instagram content without a second thought.
Here is what actually works in Stories for business accounts right now.
Behind-the-scenes content tends to perform well because it feels authentic. Show your team, your workspace, your process. People connect with people, not polished brand imagery.
Polls and questions in Stories are fantastic for engagement because they require almost no effort from the viewer. One tap, and they have interacted with your brand. That interaction signals to the algorithm that your audience is active, which helps your regular posts too.
Time-sensitive offers or announcements work brilliantly in Stories because the ephemeral format creates urgency. If it disappears in 24 hours, people are more likely to act on it now rather than scrolling past and forgetting about it entirely.
The key with Stories is consistency. Post them regularly, treat them like a daily check-in with your audience, and pay attention to what gets tapped on most.
Facebook Groups: Your Secret Weapon for Community
Owned and operated Facebook Groups are still one of the most effective ways to build a genuinely engaged community around a brand. Unlike a page, a group fosters conversation between members, not just between the brand and its followers.
For businesses, this is gold. A well-managed group creates a space where your audience helps answer each other’s questions, shares experiences, and effectively becomes advocates for your brand without you having to ask them to.
The trick is not to make the group feel like a sales channel. Keep it useful, keep it active, and contribute regularly. Just do not make every post about your product or service. Think of it as hosting a community, not running a promotional feed.
The Forgotten Feature: What Does It Mean When You Poke Someone on Facebook?
Here is where things get interesting. Most marketers completely overlook one of Facebook’s oldest features, and it is one that, when used thoughtfully, can serve as a clever re-engagement nudge.
A lot of people still ask what does it mean when you poke someone on Facebook. The honest answer is that it has always been intentionally vague. There is no text, no image, no link. It is just a small digital tap on the shoulder. That ambiguity is exactly what makes it interesting from a marketing perspective.
Obviously, businesses are not logging into Facebook and manually poking their customers. But understanding the psychology behind the poke is what matters here. It is a low-friction signal that says “I noticed you.” And that principle, the idea of a gentle, non-pushy nudge, is something every marketer should be building into their Facebook strategy in some form.
A personalised comment on a follower’s post, a “we miss you” campaign to lapsed customers, a direct message to someone who engaged with your content six months ago and then went quiet. These are all real-world applications of the same thinking.
If you want to go deeper on the history, mechanics, and surprisingly relevant marketing takeaways from this feature, this breakdown of Facebook pokes is well worth a read and it covers a lot more than you might expect.
Messenger and Direct Engagement: The Personal Touch
Facebook Messenger is still massively underused as a business tool. Automated chatbots aside, Messenger allows for genuine one-to-one conversation with customers and leads that no public post can replicate.
If someone comments on your post with a question, answering in the comments is fine. But following up via Messenger with something more tailored is even better. It shows you are paying attention, and it moves the conversation somewhere private and personal.
You can also use Messenger broadcasts to share exclusive content, offers, or updates with subscribers who have opted in. Open rates on Messenger are still considerably higher than email in most industries. That alone is reason enough to take it more seriously.
Facebook Events: Brilliant for Both Online and In-Person
If your business runs events, webinars, workshops, or online Q&A sessions, Facebook Events are still a genuinely effective way to drive attendance and build anticipation.
Events show up in the feeds of people who have expressed interest, and they remind attendees as the date approaches. They are also discoverable by people outside your immediate follower base, which gives you organic reach that standard posts rarely achieve.
The underused trick here is to post content inside the event itself. Updates, reminders, teasers, speaker announcements. It keeps the event page active and keeps your audience engaged before the day even arrives.
Reels on Facebook: Do Not Ignore the Short Video Wave
Facebook Reels are not just an Instagram import. They have their own algorithm, their own audience, and their own reach potential. Short-form video content is being prioritised heavily by Facebook right now, and brands creating Reels specifically for the platform (rather than just cross-posting) are seeing noticeably better results.
You do not need a production team. In fact, the more polished and over-produced a Reel looks, the more it feels like an ad rather than content. Authentic, helpful, slightly imperfect short videos tend to connect far better with real audiences.
Bringing It All Together
The brands winning on Facebook in 2025 are not necessarily the ones with the biggest budgets. They are the ones who understand that Facebook rewards genuine human behaviour. Conversations, reactions, personal touches, consistent presence.
From Stories and Groups to Messenger and Reels, there is no shortage of tools at your disposal. And some of the platform’s older, quirkier features have more to teach us about engagement psychology than most marketers give them credit for.
Pick two or three of the tactics in this article and commit to them for a month. Track what moves, double down on it, and iterate from there. That is how real Facebook growth happens.

