Why does your Cumming roofing Instagram have 312 followers and zero booked jobs?
Real question. The Forsyth roofers booking $20K replacements off Reels and Facebook posts aren’t running prettier feeds — they’re running fundamentally different content. Here’s the playbook for what actually works in Forsyth County in 2026.
Why does your social feed look like everyone else’s, and book nothing?
Here’s the thing. The average Cumming roofer we audit is posting once or twice a week on Instagram and Facebook. The post is usually one of three things — a stock graphic that says “Storm Season Is Here!”, a clipart-heavy “5 Star Review!” tile, or a hard-sell promo with a discount code stamped on top of a stock house photo.
Real talk: that’s not social media for a roofer. That’s wallpaper. It builds zero trust, surfaces in zero feeds, and books zero jobs. A Forsyth homeowner scrolling Instagram between school pickup and dinner doesn’t stop on a Canva graphic. They stop on a 9-second drone clip of a finished Hampton Park roof, or a before-and-after of a Lake Lanier wind-damage repair, or a face-on-camera 30-second walkthrough of “what to look for after a Forsyth wind storm.”
The math is brutal. In Forsyth County, where median household income clears $117K and Nextdoor + neighborhood Facebook groups carry enormous weight in buyer decisions, your social feed isn’t optional decoration. It’s a load-bearing part of the funnel. A homeowner sees you on Instagram, sees three real Cumming jobs in your grid, sees a face in a video, and calls. A homeowner sees you on Instagram, sees four Canva templates and a logo, and keeps scrolling.
The roofers booking jobs off social in Forsyth aren’t the ones posting the prettiest graphics. They’re the ones posting real local content — drone clips of finished neighborhood roofs, face-on-camera answers to homeowner questions, and 15-second timelapses that name specific Cumming subdivisions in the caption.
The good news? You don’t need a film crew or a full-time content manager. You need a five-format system, a posting cadence that the algorithm rewards, and one shoot day every six weeks. The rest of this guide breaks down exactly how Forsyth roofers are running it in 2026.
Canva templates vs. real local content
Same hours per week. Wildly different impact on whether the next Lake Lanier storm produces inquiries.
| What you’re posting | Standard roofer feed | Forsyth-specific content |
|---|---|---|
| Post type | Canva graphics + logo overlays | Real Cumming jobs, faces, drone clips |
| Avg engagement | 11–28 likes, 0–1 saves | 180+ reach, 14+ saves, 5+ DMs |
| Caption strategy | Generic — “Need a roof? Call us.” | Names neighborhoods (Vickery, Polo Fields, Saddleback) |
| Inquiries per month | 0–2 from social | 11–24 inbound DMs and calls |
| Compounds over time? | No — algorithmic dead end | Yes — saved Reels still book jobs a year later |
Reviewing drone footage on a Hampton Park job — every shoot becomes 8–14 weeks of social posts when planned right.
Stop posting “promotions.” Start posting answers.
You’ve probably been told the answer is “post more.” Or “engage more.” Or “run a giveaway.” Maybe a “free roof inspection” promo with a countdown timer and a shouty all-caps caption.
That’s the brochure model showing up on social. It treats Instagram and Facebook like the side of a truck — a place to advertise. The Forsyth homeowner scrolling at 9:47 p.m. between an Amazon order and a school text isn’t there to be advertised at. They’re there to learn, to be entertained, and occasionally to make a buying decision. Your job is to be the answer when they’re learning, not the interruption when they’re scrolling.
The roofers winning Vickery, Polo Fields, and the South Forsyth Hwy 9 corridor on social are running a different content menu. Educational — “Three things to check on your roof after a Lake Lanier wind event.” Behind-the-scenes — “Watch us tear off a Saddleback roof in 90 seconds.” Before-and-after — “This Hampton Park home, six weeks ago vs. today.” Neighbor proof — “Just wrapped up our 41st job in the Olde Atlanta Club area this year.” Zero hard sell. Maximum trust. Phone rings.
The roofer feed that books a $24K replacement in Forsyth doesn’t have a single Canva graphic. It has nine drone clips, four face-on-camera explainers, and a caption that names the neighborhood every single time.— What we’ve learned running 30+ roofer social accounts
That doesn’t mean every post has to be high-production. Three of the five formats can be shot on a phone in five minutes. The cadence and content type matter more than the polish. The polish you save for the two anchor pieces a month — the drone reels and before-and-afters — that do the heavy lifting.
Five content formats. One six-week shoot. One full content calendar.
Every Forsyth roofer we’ve put on a real social system follows the same five-format rotation. Run all five and the algorithm rewards you. Run only two and you’re stuck wallpapering Instagram for nothing.
The full social mix a Cumming roofer needs.
None of these work alone. Drone clips alone become a portfolio nobody saves. Educational alone becomes a podcast nobody watches. The five-format rotation is what trains the algorithm to surface you in Forsyth feeds.
Drone reels of finished Forsyth roofs.
The single highest-leverage content type for a Cumming roofer. 25–45 seconds. Drone shot of a finished neighborhood job — Vickery, Polo Fields, Hampton Park, Lake Lanier corridor, Olde Atlanta Club. Caption names the neighborhood, the project type, and the timeline. Hashtags include “#cummingga” and the subdivision. A real social media program for a Forsyth roofer is built around this format — every six-week shoot day produces 4–6 of these reels and they keep producing inquiries for 12 months. Most roofers skip drone work because of cost. The ones who don’t dominate the feed.
Educational face-on-camera.
30–60 second clip of you (or your foreman) explaining one homeowner question. “What does Lake Lanier wind damage actually look like?” “Why does insurance ask for three quotes?” Trust compounds in fifteen-second face-on-camera clips faster than in any other format.
Before-and-after carousels.
Side-by-side photos of a single Forsyth job. Five-image Instagram carousel — old roof, tear-off, decking, install, finished aerial. Carousels still pull the highest reach on Instagram for local services in 2026.
Behind-the-scenes Stories + neighbor proof posts.
Stories from active job sites — quick, raw, daily. Plus weekly “neighbor proof” posts that say “wrapped up our 18th roof in The Springs this season” with photo evidence. The five formats together build a feed that converts. Skip the connectors and the algorithm thinks you’re a brand. Run all five and Forsyth homeowners see you as the local roofer they already know.
Face-on-camera content captured on a Saddleback job — the format that builds trust in fifteen seconds flat.
How we run six-week shoot cycles for a Cumming roofer.
Map the content calendar
Every six weeks, our team plans 24 posts across the five formats. We pick three of your active or recently finished Forsyth jobs — usually one in the Lambert HS zone, one near Lake Lanier, one in South Forsyth. Map the storyboards before we ever roll camera.
One-day shoot, full library
Drone team plus videographer plus content lead. One full shoot day produces enough raw footage for 6 reels, 4 carousels, 8 face-on-camera clips, plus 25+ stories-only assets. We’ve yet to need more than a single day every six weeks for a Forsyth roofer.
Edit, schedule, engage, measure
Every post is edited, captioned with neighborhood references, scheduled into the algorithm’s preferred time slots, and engaged on for the first 60 minutes. By month 3, your inbound DM volume goes from “occasional” to “weekly.” By month 6, it’s load-bearing.
Behind the scenes — drone, gimbal, and audio crew on a Vickery shoot. One day produces six weeks of social.
The Cumming roofer whose Instagram replaced his lead platform.
A five-year roofer covering Nichols Landing, Olde Atlanta Club, and the Lake Lanier corridor was stuck at 218 Instagram followers and zero inquiries from social. Within four months on the five-format system, he’d grown to 2,140 engaged Forsyth followers. Within seven months, he was getting 26 inbound DMs a month from social alone — about 9 of which closed into $18K-plus replacements. The single biggest source: a 31-second drone reel of a Polo Fields job that pulled 41,000 views in the first 96 hours and is still booking inquiries 14 months later. Total social-attributed revenue, year one: $312,800.
Inbound DMs and inquiries from social, month over month.
Saved Reels still book jobs a year after they posted. That compounding is the entire reason social outperforms paid in Forsyth eventually.
Crew shot at the end of an Olde Atlanta Club install — every finished job becomes a multi-week content asset when shot right.
Six things to check on your current Cumming roofer social, today.
Open Instagram and Facebook on your phone right now. Run through this list as a Forsyth homeowner would. If you fail three or more, your social isn’t building trust — it’s actively filtering buyers out.
Real Cumming jobs in your last 9 posts?
Stock graphics, logo overlays, and Canva templates don’t count. A Forsyth homeowner scrolling can’t tell what you actually do without real local job photos.
At least one drone clip in the last month?
Drone reels of finished neighborhood roofs are the highest-converting roofer content format that exists. Going a month without one is leaving inquiries on the table.
Captions naming Forsyth neighborhoods?
“Just wrapped a Polo Fields tear-off.” “Storm prep in the Lake Lanier corridor.” Specific neighborhood names get 4–8x the engagement of generic captions.
A face on camera, somewhere in the feed?
Roofing is a trust business. A homeowner about to spend $22K wants to see a human, not a logo. One face-on-camera Reel a week, minimum.
Daily Stories from active job sites?
Stories don’t have to be polished. Quick raw clips from a job site each day train the algorithm to surface your reels and posts to Forsyth viewers.
Engaging back inside 60 minutes?
Replying to comments and DMs in the first hour after posting is the single biggest algorithmic boost most roofers ignore entirely.
A finished walkthrough on a South Forsyth job — content like this drives the next storm season’s inquiries.
What Cumming roofers keep asking about social media.
Four to seven feed posts a week across Instagram and Facebook, plus daily Stories. Anything less and the algorithm de-prioritizes you. Anything more and you’ll burn out before the system compounds. The five-format rotation is built around exactly this cadence — three drone or before-and-after anchors plus two to four supporting connector posts each week.
For most Forsyth roofers — no, not as a primary channel. Your buyers are 35–65, married, in Forsyth single-family homes, on Instagram and Facebook. We post to TikTok as a secondary distribution channel using the same Reels content, but we don’t build a separate TikTok strategy unless you’re explicitly trying to reach a younger demographic for storm-season educational content.
Working range we see for Forsyth roofers is $2,400–$5,200 a month for a full program — content production, six-week shoot cycles, editing, scheduling, captioning, engagement, and reporting. Anything under $1,800 is usually a virtual assistant scheduling stock graphics, which we’ve already established doesn’t book jobs. Anything over $7K should include paid amplification, not just organic.
First inbound DMs usually arrive in weeks 4–6 once the content cadence is consistent and neighborhood-specific. Real inquiry volume — 10+ DMs and calls per month attributable to social — typically lands between months 4 and 7. By month 12, the saved-Reels effect kicks in and content from six months ago is still booking inspections.
Yes — but only after the organic system is producing. Paid ads on top of weak organic content burn money. Paid ads on top of a feed that already has nine drone reels of Forsyth jobs and a clear five-format rotation amplify what’s already working. Sequence matters. Build the organic foundation first, then layer paid for acceleration around storm season and the busy Forsyth spring window.
Imagine your Instagram booking the next Lake Lanier storm season instead of wallpapering it.
If you want a free 30-minute social audit — we look at your last 30 days of posts, run them through the five-format framework, and tell you exactly which content types are missing — we do a few of these a week with roofers across the broader North Atlanta corridor and the Forsyth roofer market specifically.
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