strategy-organic-paid-hybrid
Organic-Then-Amplify Hybrid Strategy
Use when
- Produces a structured organic-then-amplify hybrid strategy document that explains the structural decline of organic reach on Facebook and Instagram, prescribes a workflow for identifying high-performing content and amplifying it with paid spend, and sets client expectations diplomatically. Invoke this skill when a client asks why their Facebook page has stopped working, when organic reach data shows a sustained decline, when a client needs justification for introducing a paid boost budget, or when building a new social media strategy that must account for the pay-to-play reality of Meta platforms in the Uganda/East Africa market.
- Use this skill when it is the closest match to the requested deliverable or workflow.
Do not use when
- Do not use this skill for graphic design, video production, software development, or legal advice beyond the repository's stated scope.
- Do not use it when another skill in this repository is clearly more specific to the requested deliverable.
Workflow
- Collect the required inputs or source material before drafting, unless this skill explicitly generates the intake itself.
- Follow the section order and decision rules in this
SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields. - Review the draft against the quality criteria, then deliver the final output in markdown unless the skill specifies another format.
Anti-Patterns
- Do not invent client facts, performance data, budgets, or approvals that were not provided or clearly inferred from evidence.
- Do not skip required inputs, mandatory sections, or quality checks just to make the output shorter.
- Do not drift into out-of-scope work such as code implementation, design production, or unsupported legal conclusions.
Outputs
- A structured markdown document, plan, playbook, or strategy ready for client-facing or internal use.
References
- Use the inline instructions in this skill now. If a
references/directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep thisSKILL.mdexecution-focused.
Required Input
Ask for the following before generating this document:
- Client business name and industry — e.g., "Kampala Coffee Roasters — retail food & beverage"
- Country / city — default is Uganda / Kampala
- Primary business goal — what the client is ultimately trying to achieve (sales, leads, awareness, community growth)
- Current Facebook Page stats — follower count, average post reach (organic), average engagement rate, and how long the page has been active
- Current paid spend, if any — monthly UGX amount spent on Facebook or Instagram boosts/ads, or zero if none
- Available boost budget — how much the client is willing or able to spend per month on paid amplification (state in UGX)
- Content production capacity — posts per week and who creates content (in-house, agency, freelancer)
- WhatsApp Business number — to assess the owned channel opportunity
- Top 3 performing posts of all time — ask the client to screenshot or share the posts with the highest reach/engagement from Page Insights
Section 1 — The Organic Reach Decline: What Happened and Why
The structural shift
Present this section to the client as context, not blame. Frame it as a market condition, not a client failure.
Facebook organic reach for business Pages has fallen sharply over the past decade. Academic and industry tracking consistently shows the following trajectory:
- 2012: Organic reach averaged approximately 16% of a Page's follower base (Edgerank Checker, cited in Chaffey, 2024)
- 2014: Reach dropped to approximately 6% following Facebook's first major algorithm update favouring friends-and-family content
- 2018: Average organic reach for large Pages fell to approximately 2%; small and mid-size Pages fared marginally better at 5–8% depending on engagement history
- 2024–2026: Organic reach has stabilised at 1–4% for most business Pages in sub-Saharan Africa, with higher variance for Pages that invest in video and Stories formats
Instagram followed the same trajectory, shifting from a chronological feed to an engagement-ranked feed in 2016. Organic reach for business accounts on Instagram now ranges from 3–8% depending on account size and content type.
This is not a temporary algorithm quirk. It is a permanent structural shift.
Why it happened
Facebook and Instagram (both owned by Meta) are advertising businesses. Their commercial model depends on selling reach to brands and businesses. The algorithm shift served two purposes simultaneously:
- User experience: Filling the feed with friends, family, and groups increases daily active use and time-on-platform — both metrics that justify Meta's advertising rates to buyers
- Revenue: When organic reach declines, businesses must pay to maintain visibility — converting previously free distribution into a paid product
The incentive structure is permanent. There is no algorithm update that will restore free reach to 2012 levels. Any strategy that depends on organic reach alone is built on a declining asset.
Section 2 — The Strategic Response: Organic-Then-Amplify
The core model
The organic-then-amplify model treats organic publishing as a testing mechanism and paid spend as a precision amplifier. It does not treat paid as a substitute for good content, nor does it treat organic as the primary distribution channel.
Apply the following principle on every post:
Prove it organically. Amplify what wins.
This approach aligns with the POEM model (Paid/Owned/Earned) by ensuring that owned content quality is validated before paid spend is committed. It also applies the 10-4-1 rule (Bodnar and Cohen, 2012): of every 15 posts in a cycle, 10 share third-party value content, 4 share original owned content, and 1 is promotional — only the promotional and highest-performing owned posts are candidates for amplification.
Why this model works in the EA market
- Budget efficiency: Ugandan SME marketing budgets are typically UGX 500,000–3,000,000/month. Boosting every post is wasteful and unsustainable. Boosting only proven content preserves budget for posts with demonstrated commercial potential.
- Algorithm reinforcement: Posts that earn strong early organic engagement receive preferential algorithmic distribution before paid spend kicks in. Boosting a post that already has momentum produces a compound effect.
- Client confidence: When clients see their own organic engagement data driving the boost decision, they trust the spend. It removes the "we are just guessing" perception of paid advertising.
Section 3 — The Organic-Then-Amplify Workflow
Follow these steps in sequence for every content cycle (weekly or fortnightly).
Step 1 — Publish organically
Post content to the Facebook Page or Instagram account with no paid spend attached. Publish at peak hours for the target audience:
- Facebook Uganda: Tuesday–Thursday, 12:00–14:00 and 19:00–21:00 EAT
- Instagram Uganda: Wednesday and Friday, 11:00–13:00 and 20:00–22:00 EAT
Do not boost at the point of publishing. Allow the post to accumulate organic reach and engagement data.
Step 2 — Monitor the early engagement window
Check post performance data at 2 hours, 4 hours, and 6 hours after publishing. Use Facebook Page Insights or Meta Business Suite. Record the following for each post:
| Metric | Where to find it |
|---|---|
| Organic reach | Page Insights → Posts → Reach |
| Engagement rate | (Reactions + Comments + Shares) ÷ Organic Reach × 100 |
| Saves (Instagram) | Post Insights → Saves |
| Link clicks (if applicable) | Page Insights → Posts → Link Clicks |
| Comments quality | Manual review — are comments substantive or emoji-only? |
Step 3 — Apply the amplification threshold
Use the following thresholds to decide whether to boost. A post must meet at least one of the primary criteria:
Primary criteria (any one triggers a boost decision):
- Engagement rate ≥ 3% within 4 hours of posting
- Engagement rate ≥ 5% within 6 hours of posting
- 3 or more unprompted shares within the first 4 hours
- Comments include buying signals: enquiries, requests for pricing, "how do I order?"
Supporting criteria (strengthen the boost decision but do not trigger alone):
- Post format is video with a watch-through rate above 30%
- Post directly features a product, service, or limited-time offer
- Post is tied to a campaign objective with a defined conversion deadline
Do not boost if:
- Engagement rate is below 1% after 6 hours — the content has not resonated; amplifying it wastes budget
- Comments are predominantly negative — amplifying crisis content accelerates reputational damage
- The post has no clear call to action — paid reach without a CTA produces vanity metrics, not results
Step 4 — Set up the boost
When a post qualifies for amplification, apply the following setup:
Audience targeting:
- Start with a saved audience built from Page Insights data (demographics of current engaged followers)
- Layer on interest targeting relevant to the product or service
- For location: target Uganda → Kampala as default; expand to Entebbe, Jinja, Gulu, Mbarara for national campaigns
Budget:
- Standard post boost: UGX 50,000–100,000 over 3–5 days
- High-priority campaign post: UGX 150,000–200,000 over 5–7 days
- Use lifetime budget for campaign posts with a fixed end date (promotions, events)
- Use daily budget for evergreen content with no fixed deadline
Placement:
- Facebook Feed + Instagram Feed: default for awareness and engagement posts
- Facebook Feed only: for posts with heavy text or complex infographics (Instagram suppresses text-heavy images)
- Stories placement: add only if the creative is formatted vertically (9:16 ratio)
Step 5 — Review and record
At boost completion, record results in the client's content tracker:
- Total reach (organic + paid combined)
- Total engagement and final engagement rate
- Link clicks or WhatsApp messages generated (if applicable)
- Cost per engagement (Total spend ÷ Total engagements)
- Decision: repeat the content format / retire the format / test a variation
Section 4 — WhatsApp as the Owned Audience Alternative
WhatsApp operates outside the Meta algorithm. A message sent to a WhatsApp Broadcast List or a WhatsApp Channel reaches 100% of opted-in subscribers at near-zero cost. This makes WhatsApp the most cost-efficient distribution channel for the EA market, where WhatsApp penetration exceeds 90% of smartphone users.
Build the owned audience in parallel
Every Facebook and Instagram post should include a prompt to join the client's WhatsApp Broadcast List or WhatsApp Channel. Include a direct WhatsApp link (wa.me/256XXXXXXXXX) in every post description that features a product, offer, or announcement.
Transition script for posts:
"Want to be the first to hear about new arrivals and exclusive offers? Join our WhatsApp list — link in the first comment."
WhatsApp content strategy
- WhatsApp Broadcasts: Use for time-sensitive offers, product launches, and event announcements. Keep messages under 200 words. Include one clear CTA with a link or phone number.
- WhatsApp Channels: Use for content-led value delivery (tips, how-to guides, behind-the-scenes). Channels build audience affinity without the transactional feel of broadcasts.
- WhatsApp Status: Post short updates, product photos, and behind-the-scenes content daily. Status views come from existing contacts — this is retention, not acquisition.
The goal is to convert social media followers into an owned WhatsApp audience that the algorithm cannot restrict. Once a contact opts into WhatsApp, the client controls that communication channel entirely.
Section 5 — Content Types That Beat the Algorithm
Not all organic content performs equally under algorithmic suppression. Prioritise formats with demonstrated organic reach advantages:
| Format | Why it outperforms | EA-specific notes |
|---|---|---|
| Short video (Reels/Facebook Video) | Meta's algorithm actively prioritises video to compete with TikTok and YouTube | Keep under 60 seconds; use subtitles — most EA users watch without sound on mobile data |
| Stories | Stories bypass the main feed algorithm; they appear in a dedicated strip with near-100% delivery to active followers | Post 3–5 Stories per day; use polls and questions to drive interaction |
| Polls and question posts | Algorithm counts votes and answers as high-value interactions; boosts distribution | Frame polls around audience opinions, not product preferences — "Which do you prefer?" not "Would you buy this?" |
| Carousel posts (Instagram) | Each swipe is counted as an engagement signal; carousels generate more time-on-post | Use carousels for how-to content, before/after, and multi-product showcases |
| Live video | Facebook Live receives priority in the feed during broadcast; followers receive notifications | Plan Lives around Q&A sessions, product launches, or tutorials; announce 24 hours in advance via WhatsApp |
| User-generated content (UGC) | Genuine customer posts shared with permission carry social proof and earn higher engagement | Tag the original poster; add a brief caption; do not edit the UGC content |
Section 6 — Post Decision Framework
Use this framework to classify every post before and after publishing:
Is the post driving strong early engagement (≥3% within 4 hours)?
├── YES → Does it have a commercial CTA (product, offer, lead capture)?
│ ├── YES → BOOST IT (UGX 50,000–200,000 depending on priority)
│ └── NO → Let it run organically; note the format for future CTA integration
└── NO → Is it under 2 hours old?
├── YES → Wait until 4-hour mark before deciding
└── NO → Is the engagement rate 1–3%?
├── YES → Leave organic; do not boost; log format performance
└── NO → Under 1% engagement after 6 hours → RETIRE the format; do not repeat
Review retired formats quarterly. A format that consistently underperforms should be dropped from the content mix, not boosted into relevance.
Section 7 — Budget Allocation Principles
Apply these principles when proposing a monthly paid amplification budget to a client. Cross-reference with meta-budget-planner for a full channel allocation model.
Minimum viable boost budget
A boost budget of UGX 200,000/month (approximately USD 54 at 2026 rates) supports 2–4 boosts per month at UGX 50,000–100,000 each. This is the floor below which paid amplification produces statistically unreliable results.
Recommended budget bands
| Monthly follower base | Recommended monthly boost budget | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Under 2,000 followers | UGX 200,000–400,000 | Focus on audience building; boost 2–3 high-engagement posts |
| 2,000–10,000 followers | UGX 400,000–800,000 | Enough to amplify 4–6 posts per month; adds lead generation campaigns |
| 10,000–50,000 followers | UGX 800,000–2,000,000 | Sustain reach for a larger base; test multiple audiences per boost |
| Over 50,000 followers | UGX 2,000,000+ | Graduated to a formal Meta Ads campaign strategy via 09-campaign-strategy |
Daily vs. lifetime budget
- Daily budget: Use for evergreen posts with no fixed end date (general awareness, brand content). Set daily spend at UGX 15,000–30,000 and let Meta optimise delivery over time.
- Lifetime budget: Use for all campaign-tied boosts (promotions, events, launches). Set a fixed total and end date. Meta will pace spending to end when the campaign ends.
Section 8 — Client Expectation-Setting Language
Use this language when explaining the organic reach decline to clients. The goal is clarity without blame and confidence without over-promising.
Opening framing (use verbatim or adapt)
"The reason your Facebook page feels quieter than it used to is not anything your team has done wrong. Facebook changed how it distributes content from business Pages about ten years ago, and has continued moving in the same direction every year since. Today, even a well-run Page with 10,000 followers might only reach 200–400 people organically from a single post — that is 2–4%. This is the reality for every business on the platform globally, including multinational brands with full-time social media teams."
Introducing paid spend (use verbatim or adapt)
"The good news is that Facebook's advertising product is extremely precise and relatively affordable compared to radio, television, or print. Rather than spending your budget broadly, we use the data from your organic posts to identify which content your audience genuinely responds to — and we only put paid support behind those posts. This means your budget works harder because we are amplifying what has already proven itself."
Managing ROI expectations (use verbatim or adapt)
"On a boost budget of UGX 100,000, you should expect to reach an additional 3,000–8,000 targeted people in Kampala, depending on the audience and creative. Whether that reach converts to enquiries and sales depends on the quality of the content and the clarity of your call to action. We track cost per engagement and cost per lead so you always know what each shilling is producing."
What not to say
- Do not promise specific reach or engagement numbers before a boost runs — Meta's delivery varies by audience saturation, creative quality, and competition
- Do not describe the organic reach decline as "Facebook being broken" — it frames the platform as unreliable rather than changed
- Do not suggest that posting more frequently will recover organic reach — frequency without engagement quality accelerates page suppression
Quality Criteria
The output of this skill meets a professional standard when it:
- Explains the organic decline clearly and diplomatically — the narrative is factual, referenced, and framed as a market condition rather than a platform failure or client error; the client leaves the conversation understanding why the shift happened, not just that it happened
- Prescribes a specific, actionable workflow — the organic-then-amplify steps are numbered, sequenced, and include concrete thresholds (engagement rates, time windows, UGX amounts) that a consultant or client can apply without ambiguity
- Is calibrated to the EA/Uganda context — all budget figures are in UGX, platform penetration data reflects the East African market, and WhatsApp is treated as a first-class channel alongside Facebook and Instagram
- Integrates owned channel strategy — the WhatsApp section is substantive, not a footnote; it presents owned audience building as a genuine structural alternative to algorithm-dependent reach
- Includes a usable decision framework — the boost/no-boost/retire decision tree is logic-driven and can be applied by a junior team member without additional guidance
- Uses language the client can hear — the expectation-setting scripts are professional, non-technical, and avoid both alarm and false reassurance; the client should feel informed and confident in the proposed approach
- Connects to the broader strategy ecosystem — the document references
meta-budget-planner,09-campaign-strategy, and the POEM model where relevant, so the consultant can escalate to adjacent skills without duplication - Stays within scope — the document does not venture into paid ad campaign structure (that belongs in
09-campaign-strategy), graphic design direction, or video production; it remains a strategic framework document
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