What are content pillars — and why your feed feels so hard to fill
Most business owners don't struggle to post on social media because they're lazy. They struggle because every single post starts from zero — a blank caption box, a Tuesday morning, and the quiet panic of "what do I even say today?" So the posting happens in bursts: five things in one week when inspiration strikes, then nothing for a month.
Content pillars fix that. They're the boring-sounding idea that quietly makes the whole thing manageable.
So what is a content pillar?
A content pillar is simply a theme your posts keep coming back to. Instead of inventing a brand-new idea every time, you decide on three or four topics up front — and every post you make fits under one of them. The blank box stops being "what do I say about my entire business?" and becomes "what's one thing I can say about this theme?" That's a far smaller, far easier question.
What good pillars look like
For a small South African product or food brand, a solid set might be:
- The product itself. New stock, how it's made, what's in it, how to use it. The obvious one — but on its own it gets repetitive fast.
- Behind the scenes. The early mornings, the packing, the person who actually runs the place. This is the stuff people genuinely connect with, and it costs nothing to film.
- Helpful or useful. A recipe, a tip, an answer to the question customers always ask. You're being useful instead of selling, which is exactly why people follow brands.
- Proof and people. A customer review, a stockist, a photo of someone enjoying what you make. Other people saying you're good is worth more than you saying it.
Four pillars is usually plenty. Two is too thin and your feed gets samey; six is too many to keep straight in your head.
How this makes posting easier
Once your pillars are set, planning a week stops being a creative emergency. You rotate through them: a product post, then a behind-the-scenes, then a useful tip, then a customer review — and round again. You can batch a whole month in one sitting because you're not searching for ideas, just filling in slots. And your feed starts to feel like one consistent brand instead of a random scrapbook, which is what makes people remember you.
An honest caveat
Pillars are a planning tool, not a straitjacket. If something real and timely happens — load-shedding humour, a Heritage Day moment, a sold-out batch — post it, pillars be damned. The framework exists to remove the friction on ordinary days, not to stop you being human on the interesting ones. And don't overthink the setup: four themes scribbled on a notepad will serve you better than a perfect strategy you never actually use.
Want this sorted for you?
We build content pillars and a month of posts for South African brands who'd rather run their business than stare at a caption box. Book a free call and we'll map yours out.
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