20 Tasks a Social Media Virtual Assistant Can Do
A social media virtual assistant is a remote specialist who handles the day-to-day tasks that keep your channels running smoothly. From planning posts and editing videos to replying to comments and pulling reports, they provide practical, hands-on help so your team can focus on strategy and sales. If you plan to hire virtual assistants, this guide outlines the specific tasks you can delegate and the outcomes you can expect. Think of it as focused virtual administration support for your social channels, built to reduce busywork and lift quality.
Before you delegate: scope, tools, and guardrails
List your platforms, your goals, and the volume of posts you want each week. Share brand voice notes, must-use design assets, and any legal or compliance rules. Give access to your scheduling tool, shared drive, and analytics. If you work with a virtual assistant service, agree on KPIs like response time to comments, publish cadence, and monthly reach or click targets. Set up a weekly check-in and a shared content calendar so everyone stays aligned.
The 20 Core Tasks
1) Profile audit and quick wins
Your assistant reviews bios, links, buttons, highlights, and pinned posts. They fix broken links, align visuals, and standardise naming across platforms. Expect a short list of “fix now” items and a plan for the next thirty days.
2) Audience and competitor scan
They map who you are talking to, what content competitors post, and which formats get traction. This becomes a reference for tone, topics, and post types. It informs your calendar and reduces guesswork.
3) Brand voice crib sheet
They turn your existing tone into a one-page guide with examples: preferred words, sentence length, emoji rules, and CTA phrasing. This keeps every caption consistent even if multiple people post.
4) Monthly content calendar
Your assistant builds a platform-by-platform plan covering themes, post formats, and publish dates. The calendar also flags important dates and campaigns. You approve once, then they execute.
5) Caption writing and post assembly
They write short, clear captions that match the brief, add CTAs, and format line breaks. They resize images, attach carousels, and ensure alt text is included for accessibility. The result is ready-to-publish posts, not draft ideas.
6) Short-form video support
They create shot lists, write hooks, and cut clips for Reels, TikTok, and Shorts. Expect simple edits, subtitles, and on-brand cover frames. This lets you produce more video without drowning in edits.
7) Hashtag and keyword frameworks
They research relevant hashtags and keywords per platform. You get tiered lists to rotate, avoid spam tags, and strengthen reach. These lists are updated monthly based on performance.
8) Scheduling and cross-posting
Your assistant loads approved posts into your scheduler, sets times, and adapts copy for each platform. They handle time zones and best-time windows. Cross-posting is done with tweaks so posts feel native, not copy-pasted.
9) Daily community management
They monitor comments and DMs, reply to common questions, and keep the tone friendly. Anything sensitive or complex is escalated with context so you can jump in quickly. Response rules are kept in a simple playbook.
10) Social customer care triage
They tag support-type messages, create tickets if needed, and close the loop with the customer once a fix is confirmed. This joins social and service, which improves trust and retention.
11) Influencer and partner shortlist
Your assistant builds a list of relevant creators, checks audience quality, and drafts outreach messages. They track responses, product sends, and deliverables so campaigns move forward without constant chasing.
12) UGC and permissions workflow
They identify positive user posts, request permission to reshare, and file assets with credits. A lightweight log prevents missed attributions and keeps you compliant.
13) Giveaway and campaign mechanics
They draft rules, coordinate assets, and manage entries. They verify winners and document the process. Expect cleaner runs and fewer admin headaches.
14) Social listening and brand mentions
Your assistant monitors mentions, tags, and keywords tied to your brand or category. You get a weekly snapshot of opportunities, customer quotes, and risk flags. This shapes content and support priorities.
15) Paid social support, setup and hygiene
They build basic audiences, check UTMs, and prepare creative variants. While a media buyer may run budgets, your assistant maintains asset folders, naming standards, and post-launch checklists.
16) Pixel, conversions, and link hygiene
They work with your developer or marketer to check pixels, conversions, and landing page links. Broken UTMs and dead links are fixed quickly, which improves reporting accuracy.
17) A/B tests for hooks and formats
They plan simple tests: first-frame hooks, caption length, carousels versus short video, and call-to-action phrasing. Results are captured in a testing log with a clear “keep, tweak, drop” decision.
18) Repurposing across formats
One blog becomes a carousel, three short videos, and a LinkedIn post. Your assistant slices long content into social-ready pieces and refreshes evergreen posts with updated stats or visuals.
19) Reporting and insights pack
They pull platform analytics, relevant website data, and top-performing posts. Each month, you get a concise slide or doc: what worked, what dipped, and what to try next. Decisions become data-driven rather than based on gut feel.
20) Admin, SOPs, and asset libraries
This is the virtual administration support backbone. Your assistant maintains a folder structure for raw and final assets, keeps login lists and permissions tidy, and updates SOPs as tools change. This avoids bottlenecks and speeds up onboarding.
Workflow that keeps quality high
Set a weekly cadence: calendar review Monday, production mid-week, scheduling by Friday, report and listening notes every fortnight. Keep briefs short and repeatable with templates for captions, video hooks, and outreach emails. Record decisions in the calendar or a shared doc so context is never lost. If you hire virtual assistants through a virtual assistant service, ask for cover arrangements so daily checks continue during holidays.
What to measure
Track output and outcomes. Output: number of posts, response time, and completion rate for planned tasks. Outcomes: reach, saves, profile actions, website clicks, and cost per result if ads are active. Review top posts to see patterns you can repeat next month. Use the insights to adjust topics, formats, and testing priorities.
Getting started
Start with two or three platforms and a simple, repeatable plan: three to five posts a week, one short-form video, and daily community checks. Share your brand voice guide and access on day one, then hand over scheduling and comment replies with clear rules. The first month focuses on quick wins and stable publishing. By month two, testing and repurposing can scale. Over time, this role becomes the engine room that keeps your socials consistent and useful, while freeing you to steer the bigger picture.