For a lot of small businesses, hiring a social media manager feels like the natural solution to a real problem: social needs to happen consistently, you don't have the time to do it yourself, and paying someone to take it off your plate seems straightforward. The logic makes sense. The numbers are where it usually gets complicated.
What you're actually paying for
A freelance social media manager in the UK usually charges somewhere between £500 and £1,500 a month depending on how much they're doing and how experienced they are. A junior in-house hire costs more once you factor in salary, employer NI, and the management time it takes to brief them properly and review their work.
What you get for that varies a lot. A good social media manager brings creative thinking, platform knowledge, and the ability to write in your voice. A bad one produces generic content you wouldn't have posted yourself and takes longer to manage than it would take to do it. The range of quality in the market is wide, and the early months of any relationship involve a significant investment of your time explaining your business before they can represent it well.
The content problem
The biggest underestimated cost of hiring someone for social isn't the fee — it's the briefing. Good social media content for a small business is specific. It comes from knowing your clients, your cases, your opinions, and your voice. A social media manager can produce content, but the ideas and the substance usually still need to come from you. That means a standing meeting each week, reviewing drafts, giving feedback, and staying close enough that the content actually sounds like your business.
For some businesses, that structure works well and the time invested is worth it. For others, it turns out to be only slightly less time than doing it themselves, with an added £1,000 a month of spend.
What the automated alternative looks like
The question isn't really "should I hire someone?" It's "what does my social need to actually do?" For most small businesses, the answer is consistent presence on one or two platforms, content that feels genuine and specific, and a system that doesn't require constant attention to keep running.
An automated scheduling setup — where you batch content once a week and the system handles the publishing — costs a fraction of what a social manager costs and puts the creative control back with you. The time saving is real. The content stays in your voice. And you're not managing another person.
A free Business Audit will help you work out which model makes more sense for where your business is right now.
Work out whether a social manager or a system is the right answer for your business. Free 20-minute Business Audit.
Book a Free Audit Stop posting manually →