
Influencer marketing: Types, strategy, and how to run campaigns that actually work
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Saif AliPublished
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Wondering what the best time to post on social media is in 2026? The short answer: mid-morning on weekdays, roughly 9 AM to 12 PM in your audience’s time zone, is the safest window across most platforms.
The honest answer: it depends on where your audience lives, when they scroll, and which platform you are posting on, because a time that works on LinkedIn will quietly bury your post on TikTok. That is why this guide exists.
We have pulled together timing data for 11 platforms, including newer networks like Threads and Bluesky that most timing reports still ignore, and combined it with ContentStudio’s own research on posts published through our platform.
You will get a quick-reference table up top, a short timing breakdown for each network, and a repeatable method for finding your own best time, which will always beat any benchmark in this article.
Here is the 2026 summary across all 11 platforms covered in this report. All times are in your audience’s local time zone, not yours.
| Platform | Best times to post | Best days | Worst day |
| 9 AM to 12 PM (peak around 9 AM) | Wednesday, Thursday | Saturday | |
| 9 to 11 AM, secondary 6 to 8 PM | Wednesday, Thursday | Friday | |
| X (Twitter) | 9 AM to 12 PM, with afternoons gaining ground | Tuesday to Thursday | Saturday |
| 11 AM to 5 PM (afternoons overtook mornings in 2026) | Tuesday to Thursday | Saturday | |
| TikTok | 2 PM to 8 PM | Tuesday to Thursday, plus Sunday evening | Sunday morning |
| YouTube (long-form) | Publish by mid-afternoon for the 6 to 10 PM viewing peak | Sunday to Tuesday | Monday |
| YouTube Shorts | 4 PM to 7 PM | Friday, Saturday | Monday |
| 8 PM to 11 PM | Saturday, Sunday | Wednesday | |
| Google Business Profile | 8 AM to 10 AM | Monday to Thursday | Sunday |
| Threads | 7 AM to 12 PM | Tuesday to Friday | Sunday |
| Bluesky | 9 AM to 3 PM, secondary 8 to 10 PM | Weekdays, Tuesday strongest | Saturday |
| Telegram | 12 PM to 2 PM, 6 to 10 PM | Tuesday to Friday | Sunday |
Treat this table the way a pilot treats a weather forecast. It tells you the conditions most accounts fly in, not the conditions above your runway.
The platform sections below explain the reasoning behind each window, and the second half of this guide shows you how to replace these averages with numbers from your own audience.
No, and any report that promises a single magic hour is selling you convenience, not accuracy. What actually exists is a set of predictable attention patterns. People check certain platforms at certain moments of their day, and those moments are consistent enough to plan around.
Think about how differently each network fits into a daily routine. LinkedIn gets opened with the first coffee of the workday. Instagram fills the lunch break and the sofa hours after dinner. TikTok owns the late evening, when people have decided they are done being productive.
Pinterest spikes on weekends, when people finally have time to plan the projects they saved all week. YouTube viewership climbs after work and peaks on weekend mornings and afternoons.
Your job is not to memorize a universal answer. It is to figure out where your audience’s routine intersects with each platform, then schedule into that intersection. The benchmarks in this guide describe the average intersection. Your analytics describe yours.

There is also a floor effect worth naming: posting at the “wrong” time will not kill a great post, and posting at the perfect time will not save a weak one. Timing is an amplifier.
It decides how big the initial audience for your content is, and the algorithm decides everything after that based on how those first viewers respond. Which brings us to the mechanics.
Most social media algorithms run on some version of the same logic: the more engagement your post earns in its first minutes and hours, the more people the platform shows it to afterward.
Here is the sequence. You publish. The platform shows your post to a small slice of your followers who are online right now. If they like, comment, share, or watch, the algorithm reads that as a quality signal and widens distribution to more followers, then to non-followers through recommendations, Explore pages, and For You feeds.
If that first slice scrolls past, distribution stalls, and the post quietly dies regardless of how good it was. Posting time controls the size and mood of that first slice. Publish when a large share of your audience is active, and you give the algorithm a bigger sample of potential engagers to test your content on.
Publish at 3 AM their time, and you are asking a handful of night owls to carry your reach for you. This is why timing matters most in the first hour and matters less as a post ages. It is also why evergreen platforms like Pinterest and YouTube are more forgiving than feed-driven platforms like X and Threads, where a post’s lifespan is measured in minutes.
The faster the feed moves, the more your publishing time matters. Two basics to lock in before you touch any platform-specific numbers:

If you run marketing from Dubai for customers in London and New York, your 9 AM is still their pre-dawn. Every time in this guide refers to where your audience lives.
If your following splits across regions, either schedule separate posts per region or anchor to the time zone where most of your revenue comes from.
A breakfast cafe should post in the early morning when people are deciding where to eat. A cocktail bar should post in the evening and on weekends. B2B brands should post inside business hours. D2C and entertainment brands often win outside them.
Your product decides your clock as much as the platform does. With the mechanics covered, here is the platform-by-platform breakdown.

Quick answer: 9 AM to 12 PM on weekdays, with Wednesday and Thursday delivering the strongest engagement. Across 2026 industry data covering millions of Facebook posts, Thursday at 9 AM stands out as the single best slot.
The 2026 data draws a clear midweek arc: Wednesday leads on overall engagement, Thursday follows closely, and both drop away sharply into the weekend. Saturday is the quietest day on the platform; large-scale 2026 engagement analyses consistently put weekends and early mornings as Facebook’s weakest windows.
The same data shows engagement sustaining later into the day than on most platforms, with a strong 12 PM to 8 PM block on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, so an early-afternoon slot is a solid second choice if you miss the morning.
One pattern worth planning around: brands crowd into Tuesday because it feels like a productive publishing day, while audiences, particularly business audiences, are heads-down in their own workweek. Midweek posts consistently outperform it.
A few Facebook-specific timing notes worth planning around:
Facebook deserves more depth than a pillar section can give it, including how timing shifts for Pages versus Groups and how to read your audience activity data inside Meta Business Suite.
We cover all of it in our full guide to the best time to post on Facebook.
Quick answer: 9 to 11 AM on weekdays, with a strong secondary window at 6 to 8 PM. Wednesday and Thursday are the top days; Friday is the weakest.
Instagram’s 2026 pattern converges on two daily windows. Analyses of millions of Instagram posts this year found Thursday at 9 AM is the single highest-reach slot, with early mornings on Wednesday and Thursday consistently strong and a second engagement spike around 6 PM on most days; the lunch-break app has become a morning-and-evening app.
Separate 2026 engagement data points the same two directions, with the 6 to 9 AM block a sweet spot and 8 PM the peak for views.
On days of the week, the 2026 studies agree: reach dips from Friday, stays soft through the weekend, and only fully recovers on Monday. Wednesday comes out on top for engagement, and Friday is the worst day to post.
If your own audience data shows a weekend exception, lifestyle, food, and entertainment accounts sometimes see one because fewer brands compete in the feed trust your analytics, but as a default, weekdays win.
Two format-specific notes:
Quick answer: 9 AM to 12 PM on Tuesday through Thursday, with afternoons gaining ground in 2026. Thursday remains the peak engagement day.
The 2026 studies split on the hour but agree on the days. Some data keeps X a morning platform, with 8 to 11 AM on weekdays the strongest block, while engagement-volume data shows the midday-to-late-afternoon stretch (12 to 6 PM, Tuesday through Thursday) carrying the most activity as people use the platform for a real-time pulse-check between tasks.
The safe read: start in the 9 AM to 12 PM window, and test early-afternoon slots — the morning-only rule is loosening.
A post’s effective lifespan in the feed is the shortest of any platform in this guide, often under an hour for accounts without massive followings. Three practical consequences:
We break down hour-by-hour engagement patterns, how timing differs for B2B versus creator accounts, and what changed with recent algorithm updates in our full guide to the best time to post on Twitter.
Quick answer: 11 AM to 5 PM, Tuesday through Thursday. In a genuine 2026 shift, afternoons have overtaken mornings. Saturday is still dead.
LinkedIn has the most predictable rhythm of any platform because it is welded to the workweek. Activity climbs on Monday morning, peaks midweek, fades on Friday afternoon, and flatlines on the weekend.
What changed in 2026 is the hour, not the day. Industry analyses of millions of LinkedIn posts this year found the top-performing slots have moved to mid-to-late afternoon around 3 to 4 PM midweek, a noticeable shift from 2025, when peak times sat firmly inside the morning workday.
The broader 2026 engagement data lands on 11 AM to 5 PM, Tuesdays through Thursdays, as the reliable block. The likely driver: LinkedIn’s feed increasingly resurfaces posts through connection activity rather than pure recency, and professionals now catch up on the platform in the afternoon lull between deep-focus work and the end of the day, not just over the first coffee.
The practical takeaway: treat 11 AM as your earliest slot, favor early-to-mid afternoon, and keep Thursday as your anchor day. Saturday posts still earn the least engagement by a wide margin; you can take Saturday off on LinkedIn without losing anything.
What makes LinkedIn timing unusual is that the feed moves slowly. A post that gets early traction can keep surfacing for two to three days, sometimes longer, because the algorithm resurfaces posts whenever a connection engages with them. That has two implications:
One more finding from our research worth stating plainly: LinkedIn shows the lowest raw engagement counts of the four major networks we track, but that is a function of its audience being busy professionals, not a sign the platform underdelivers.
Our complete guide to the best time to post on LinkedIn covers company page versus personal profile timing, industry-by-industry differences, and how to read your follower activity data.
Quick answer: 2 PM to 8 PM, Tuesday through Thursday, with the late-afternoon ramp (2 to 6 PM) now the core window and Sunday evening a surprise strong slot. Sunday morning stays the weakest.
The 2026 data pulls the window slightly earlier than pure evening: engagement analyses show 2 to 6 PM on Tuesdays through Fridays is when activity surges as audiences wind down the workday, while a separate 2026 study of over 2 million TikTok videos put 6 to 8 PM at the top, with Sunday evening the single best day and Friday and Saturday the drop-off days.
Late afternoon into early evening is the consensus zone. Practical timing guidance for TikTok in 2026:
For hour-by-hour breakdowns, niche-specific timing, and how TikTok’s distribution phases actually work, read our full guide to the best time to post on TikTok.
Quick answer: for long-form, publish by mid-afternoon so your video is indexed and recommendable by the 6 to 10 PM viewing peak. Sunday through Tuesday are the strongest publishing days in 2026 data. For Shorts, 4 to 7 PM on Friday and Saturday leads.
YouTube timing works differently from every other platform in this guide because you are not timing for the feed; you are timing for the recommendation engine. Watch time peaks in the evening, roughly 7 PM to 10 PM, and on weekend afternoons.
But you should not publish at 7 PM. YouTube needs a few hours to process a new video, index its metadata, and gather early performance signals before it starts recommending it broadly.
Publishing in the early afternoon means your video is warmed up and circulating by the time the evening audience arrives. Weekend publishing shifts earlier for the same reason: weekend viewing starts late morning, so a 9 AM to 11 AM upload catches the full arc of the day.
Other YouTube-specific timing realities:
Our dedicated guide to the best time to post on YouTube goes deeper on Shorts versus long-form timing, how to read the “When your viewers are on YouTube” report in YouTube Studio, and publishing cadence for growing channels.
Quick answer: 8 PM to 11 PM, with Saturday and Sunday as the strongest days. Pinterest runs on planning time, and people plan at night and on weekends.
Pinterest is the outlier in this report. Every other platform rewards you for catching people in a spare moment. Pinterest rewards you for catching people in a planning moment, and planning happens when the day’s obligations are done.
The 2026 data backs this up from multiple directions: day-of-week engagement rankings run Sunday > Saturday > Friday with Wednesday at the bottom, and a 2026 analysis of 2 million pins found the 8 to 11 PM weekday window earns up to 40% more initial distribution than off-hours.
One caveat for business accounts: brand-profile engagement data peaks earlier, at 10 AM to 1 PM midweek, so B2B pinners should test the midday window too.
Evenings after 8 PM and weekend mornings are when users sit down to plan meals, trips, weddings, renovations, and wardrobes, which is why Pinterest’s engagement curve is almost the inverse of LinkedIn’s. Seasonality matters more on Pinterest than posting hour does.
Pinners plan far ahead of the calendar; holiday-season searches build from early November, and wedding-season content spikes in spring, so publish seasonal Pins 30 to 45 days before the moment
Quick answer: 8 AM to 10 AM, Monday through Thursday, so your update is live when local search activity peaks during the day.
Google Business Profile is the platform most timing reports skip entirely, which is a mistake for any business with a physical location or local service area. GBP posts appear directly in your Business Profile on Google Search and Maps, which means they surface at the exact moment someone is searching for what you sell.
No other platform in this guide puts your content in front of higher-intent viewers. Timing on GBP is about search behavior rather than feed behavior. Local searches (“coffee near me”, “plumber in Leeds”, “dentist open today”) concentrate during daytime hours, with a strong morning ramp and a lunchtime peak.
Publishing your update between 8 AM and 10 AM means it is fresh and visible through the entire high-intent window of that day.
What to know about GBP timing in practice:
Quick answer: 7 AM to 12 PM on weekdays; Tuesday through Friday, the 2026 data confirms Threads inherited Instagram’s audience but behaves like a morning text platform.
Threads has settled into a distinct rhythm since its launch: it borrowed Instagram’s user base but developed X’s usage pattern. People check Threads in the morning and during work breaks for conversation and commentary, then shift to Instagram proper in the evening for visual content.
That makes weekday mornings the reliable window, with a secondary lunchtime bump. The algorithm context matters here. Threads leans heavily on recommended content rather than chronological following feeds, so a post’s early reply activity strongly influences whether it gets pushed to non-followers.
Posting when your existing audience is awake and chatty gives you the reply velocity the algorithm is looking for.
Timing tactics specific to Threads:
Quick answer: 9 AM to 3 PM on weekdays, with 1 to 3 PM the golden window and a secondary conversational bump at 8 to 10 PM. Tuesday is the strongest day; Saturday is the quietest.
Bluesky has grown from a niche X alternative into a network large enough that timing questions about it now show up in search data, and almost nobody has published a serious answer. Here is what we can say based on how the platform actually works.
Bluesky’s defining feature for timing purposes is that its default following feed is chronological, and its custom feeds are community-built rather than driven by a single engagement-maximizing algorithm.
On a chronological feed, publish time is not one factor among many. It is nearly everything. Your post appears at the top of your followers’ feeds at the moment you publish and then slides down as newer posts arrive. There is no algorithmic second life.
That mechanic leads to a few clear rules:
Quick answer: 12 PM to 2 PM and 6 PM to 10 PM, Tuesday through Friday. Telegram is a notification-driven platform, so you are timing an interruption, not a feed. (2026 usage data puts the evening window at 6 to 10 PM, slightly longer than before; B2B channels skew toward the 1 to 4 PM workday block instead.)
Telegram is unlike everything else in this report because there is no algorithm and no feed. When you post to a channel, every subscriber gets the message, and unless they have muted you, many get a push notification.
That flips the timing question. You are not competing for algorithmic distribution; you are choosing the moment you tap someone on the shoulder. The best moments to tap are the ones where a notification is welcome: the lunch break and the evening wind-down.
Midday posts catch people scanning their accumulated messages over food. Evening posts, between 6 PM and 9 PM, catch the leisure window when people actually read long-form channel content rather than skimming it.
The moments to avoid are just as important:
The single biggest adjustment you should make to every benchmark in this guide is not platform-based; it is audience-based. B2B and B2C audiences live on opposite clocks, and applying the wrong clock costs more reach than picking the wrong platform.
B2B audiences engage inside business hours, because they scroll professional content when they are in a professional headspace. That compresses the useful window to roughly 8 AM to 5 PM, Tuesday through Thursday, with the morning half outperforming the afternoon.
Mondays are weaker because people are clearing inboxes and planning their week, and Fridays fade fast after lunch. B2C audiences are the mirror image. They engage when they are off the clock: lunch breaks, commutes, evenings, and weekends.
A consumer brand posting at 10 AM Tuesday is talking to people who are at work and half-listening. The same post at 8 PM, or on Saturday morning, lands when the audience is relaxed, receptive, and more likely to act on what they see.
This is why Instagram’s Saturday spike and TikTok’s evening dominance matter so much more for consumer brands than for anyone else.

A few industry-specific patterns worth folding in:
Every benchmark in this article assumes you know where your audience lives, so it is worth spending a section on the assumption, because this is where most timing strategies quietly fall apart.
If your audience sits in one region, the fix is trivial: set your scheduler to that time zone and forget about it. The hard case, and the common one for online brands, is an audience split across regions.
A SaaS company might have a third of its followers in North America, a third in the UK and Europe, and a third spread across Asia and Australia. There is no single hour that serves all three. London’s 10 AM is New York’s 5 AM and Sydney’s 8 PM.
Three workable strategies, in order of effort:
Anchor to your revenue time zone. Look at where your customers, not just your followers, are concentrated, and schedule for that region’s peak windows. Followers elsewhere still see your content, just not at their ideal hour. This is the right default for most small teams because it is one decision instead of a daily puzzle.
Split the difference with overlap windows. Certain hours catch two regions at once. Early afternoon UK time reaches European audiences in their afternoon and the US East Coast in its morning. Late evening US Pacific time catches early risers in Europe and afternoon audiences in Asia. If your audience is genuinely bi-regional, building your schedule around these overlaps beats optimizing for either region alone.
Post regionally distinct content. The heaviest but most effective option: publish separate posts timed for each major region, varied enough in content that overlapping followers do not see obvious duplicates.
Everything above is the industry-average answer. Your account has a specific answer, and finding it takes about fifteen minutes of setup and a few weeks of patience. Here is the process.

Every major network now tells you when your followers are online:
Pick your two or three best candidate windows from the audience data. For three weeks, rotate comparable content through those windows.
Comparable is the keyword: test similar formats and topics against each other, because a great video posted at a mediocre time will always beat a weak photo posted at the perfect time, and that tells you nothing about timing.
The manual process works, but it is a snapshot, and audience behavior drifts with seasons, follower growth, and platform changes. This is exactly the problem ContentStudio’s Best Time to Post feature was built to solve.
It analyzes your connected accounts’ historical engagement and recommends posting slots per platform, updating as your audience data changes, so your schedule tracks your audience instead of a benchmark article from months ago.
Inside your ContentStudio dashboard, the Analyze section adds the review layer: an overview of engagement across every connected platform in one view, so you can compare how the same content performed on Facebook versus Instagram versus LinkedIn without hopping between native analytics tools.
They are two halves of one decision, and frequency is the half that more often goes wrong. Perfect timing on a schedule you cannot sustain is worth less than decent timing on a schedule you never miss, because consistency is itself a signal, both to algorithms that reward reliable accounts and to audiences who build habits around your presence.
The sustainable baselines, per platform, look like this: 3 to 4 posts a week on Facebook and LinkedIn, 3 to 5 feed posts a week on Instagram with daily Stories, 1 to 2 daily videos on TikTok if you are pushing growth, several daily posts on X and Bluesky, 3 to 10 fresh Pins a day on Pinterest, 1 to 2 weekly GBP updates, and 1 to 2 daily Telegram messages at most.
If those numbers look like a lot in aggregate, that is because they are, and it is why timing strategy and scheduling strategy have to be designed together. We have mapped out exactly how to build that calendar, including templates and per-platform cadence recommendations, in our guide to building a social media posting schedule.
The best time to post on social media in 2026 is a three-layer answer. The first layer is the benchmark: weekday mid-mornings, Tuesday to Thursday, with the platform-specific adjustments in the table at the top of this page.
The second layer is your audience: their time zones, their routines, and the activity data every platform now hands you for free. The third layer, and the only one that keeps improving on its own, is continuous measurement, where your scheduler learns from your engagement history and adjusts your slots as your audience changes.
Ready to put this on autopilot? Connect your accounts to ContentStudio, switch on Best Time to Post, and let your own audience data set the schedule. You can plan 30 days of perfectly timed content across all eleven of these platforms from one calendar, with a free trial and no credit card required.
Across platforms, weekday mid-mornings to early afternoons, roughly 9 AM to 12 PM in your audience’s time zone, are the most consistently strong window, with Tuesday through Thursday the safest days. Platform peaks differ: X and Threads favor mornings, LinkedIn shifted to afternoons in 2026, Instagram splits between 9–11 AM and 6–8 PM, and TikTok and Pinterest favor evenings. Use the summary table at the top of this guide for per-platform windows.
Anchor your schedule to the time zone where most of your customers are, then use overlap windows (such as early afternoon UK time, which catches both Europe and the US East Coast morning) to serve secondary regions. On fast-feed platforms like X, posting the same theme at different hours for different regions is also viable.
Tuesday through Thursday are the strongest days on nearly every platform. 2026 engagement data covering billions of interactions shows Tuesdays and Wednesdays with the highest peak engagement across almost all networks, and Sunday the lowest. Pinterest is the weekend exception, peaking on Saturday and Sunday evenings, and TikTok shows a Sunday-evening bright spot.
For feed-driven platforms, late-night posts in your audience’s time zone reach a small initial audience, which limits algorithmic distribution, so it is usually wasted effort. The exceptions are TikTok and Pinterest, where evening activity runs late, and content has a long recommendation tail, and any situation where “your night” is your audience’s daytime.
If you have no analytics data at all and need one default, schedule for 10 AM on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday in your audience’s time zone. It sits inside the reliable window on every major weekday-driven platform and avoids the dead zones (early mornings, late Fridays, Sundays) on all of them.
It depends on the platform’s feed speed. Slow feeds (Facebook, LinkedIn) reward 3 to 4 quality posts a week. Fast feeds (X, Bluesky) support multiple daily posts. Discovery platforms (TikTok, Pinterest, YouTube Shorts) reward daily output if quality holds. The full breakdown is in the frequency section above.
No. Blog timing follows search and email behavior rather than social feed activity. Early weekday mornings are the common convention so posts are live for the day’s search and newsletter traffic, but for SEO-driven content, publish timing matters far less than freshness and promotion. The times in this guide apply to social platforms.
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Saif Ali is a Content Marketing Strategist at ContentStudio with over five years of experience across SaaS, IT, and digital marketing. He specializes in SEO-led content, AI content creation, and social media strategy, and leads editorial review at ContentStudio, fact-checking and refining articles for accuracy, SEO, and a consistent brand voice.
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