Stop Selling Tickets. Start Building a Scene.

Ava CookLocal, Tips & Tricks

For years, event social media has followed the same playbook: announce, hype, sell, repeat. But attendee behavior is shifting, and the planners who notice first will have a real edge.

People aren’t just looking for things to attend, they’re looking for places to belong. The events winning attention right now aren’t the ones shouting “buy tickets now.” They’re the ones that feel like an ongoing community you’d want to be part of, ticket or not.

Here’s how to shift your social strategy to match.

1. Post like a community, not a billboard

Every post doesn’t need a call-to-action. In fact, the accounts gaining traction post content that has nothing to do with selling: behind-the-scenes prep, staff picks, “this made us laugh today,” polls about preferences, recurring content series.

Try a simple test: if you removed your event’s name and logo, would the post still be interesting? If not, it’s an ad, not content.

2. Build in “no pressure to engage” moments

A growing audience wants connection without the performance of networking. Translate that into your content by spotlighting low-stakes, drop-in moments, a quiet coffee corner at your event, a solo-friendly activity, a “come as you are” theme.

This isn’t just feel-good messaging. It signals to a wider audience that your events are accessible, not just for extroverted regulars.

3. Lean into niche over broad

Generic event promotion competes with everything else in a feed. Specific, niche content earns saves and shares. Instead of “join us for our networking mixer,” try framing around the actual interest that brings people together,  the hobby, the cause, the shared identity.

The more specific the angle, the more likely it resonates with someone who feels like “this is for me,” not “this is for everyone.”

4. Create content people want to return for

Recurring series outperform one-off promos. A weekly “meet the vendor” feature, a running countdown series, a recurring Q&A, these give followers a reason to check back even between events.

This also gives you a content calendar that doesn’t depend entirely on having an event to promote.

5. Use real moments, not polished ones

Audiences are increasingly drawn to content that feels unfiltered and real over heavily produced marketing. Raw clips, candid photos, and genuine reactions often outperform polished graphics, and they’re faster to produce, too.

The bottom line

The shift isn’t about posting less promotional content, it’s about earning attention between the promos. Build a feed people would follow even if they never bought a ticket, and your actual event announcements will land with an audience that already feels like they’re part of something.