How do you treat content that doesn’t take off? (+ My rules)
Ten years ago, if a Facebook post didn’t receive enough reactions, I would delete it immediately.
Yep, 18-year-old Nika was terrified that people would notice her “failure.” Reality check: when a post flops, almost nobody sees it anyway. The only person who actually suffers from the low engagement is the original poster.
My current guidelines are clear:
Never delete content that doesn’t take off.
Because:
It’s practice – every post levels up your skill.
You instantly see what doesn’t work.
It still earns a few impressions and keeps your daily posting streak alive.
Some “flops” randomly blow up weeks or even months later.
What about you?
How do you handle content that doesn’t perform?
240 views


Replies
Scade.pro
great rules, Nika!
I am for repurposing content. I prefer posting one piece on different platforms. And it performs differently on them.
I write articles mainly I perfectly know that an article may not get thousands of views, but it can still bring you a huge b2b deal (or a couple of them). So I never underestimate a content that didn't go viral.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@nastassia_k Which platforms are you active on and which bring you the best results?
I usually either optimize the content after analysing the impressions, clicks, avg position and ctr, or do a full update by filtering out the content gap, checking SERPs and LLMs for what can be improved, test and experiment with probably images, alt tags and other elements.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@tania_j I also tag people, but do not do alt texts. Do you see any positive results with that?
OMG, I used to do the same in 2021, when I started creating content on LinkedIn.
Any post that used to tank would give me this subtle embarrassment, thinking my friends would see it and laugh… and I would delete it. But later, I did one thing, I blocked my friends on LinkedIn. And after that, I never feared low engagement, because who cares? If I look back now, I laugh at my silly actions, but I feel blocking my friends in the initial stage gave me a kind of freedom.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@rashiaroraofficial But what if your friends supported you? But this is true... the people I know – I am more embarrassed to show them my work.
@busmark_w_nika Maybe. But I feel, friends know our old versions showing them your work feels like exposing a new self.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@rashiaroraofficial and maybe it is progress over time ;)
TinyCommand
Honestly, I relate to this a lot.
Earlier, low engagement felt personal, like the post said something about me, not the idea. Over time, I realised most “flops” aren’t failures, they’re just… timing mismatches.
Some posts I almost deleted actually helped me later, not because they went viral, but because they showed me what worked and what didn’t. Which lines made sense. Which ones didn’t land.
Now I treat low-performing content like a note to self:
Don’t overreact
Don’t romanticise numbers
Just keep shipping
The irony is, once you stop obsessing over performance, your content actually gets better.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@anushkahode Which platform did you experiment with the most?
TinyCommand
@busmark_w_nika LinkedIn. It’s been my main experiment lately, especially learning to not judge a post too quickly just by early engagement.
minimalist phone: creating folders
@anushkahode are we connected there? I cannot recall :D
minimalist phone: creating folders
@george_esther Do you do these things only for LinkedIn? Or are you also on other platforms?