From Site To Socials - How To Turn Today’s Project Work Into A Month Of Content
Most construction companies do great work on site but struggle to show it online.
This article explains a simple, repeatable way to turn day-to-day project activity into a month of social media content that attracts clients and talent.

From Site To Socials - How To Turn Today’s Project Work Into A Month Of Content
Walk around a live construction site and there is constant activity: progress, problem
solving, coordination, and craftsmanship. Look at many construction company feeds
and the story is very different. You might see the occasional completed project photo
and long gaps between posts. The work is there, but the story is not being told.
The reason usually comes down to process. Site teams are busy, office teams are
stretched, and marketing only happens when someone remembers to grab a photo.
You do not need a film crew to change this. You need a simple way to capture what
is already happening and turn it into regular content.
A good starting point is to choose one project to focus on rather than trying to cover
everything. Pick a live job that represents the type of work you want more of, is at a
stage where visible progress happens week by week, and has a client who is
comfortable with you sharing updates. That project becomes your content anchor for
the month.
Once you have chosen a project, nominate one person on site as the content lead.
This is usually a site manager, assistant or supervisor who is already close to the
work and reasonably confident using their phone. Their responsibility is small but
clear: capture a few photos and very short clips during the week and send them to
the office or your marketing partner. Ten to fifteen minutes, twice a week, is usually
enough.
Instead of giving that person a long list, give them a simple pattern to follow. At the
start of the week, they can take a wide photo or short video that shows the current
state of the project. Near the end of the week, they can capture another shot from
the same position so progress is obvious. In between, they can collect one or two
close-ups that highlight detail, such as a complex installation, a section of high
quality finish, or a coordination meeting happening around drawings.
People bring the site to life, so encourage at least one image or clip that involves the
team. This might be a brief video of a foreman explaining what changed this week, or
a photo of the crew, clearly in PPE, working on a key element. The aim is to show
real people doing real work, not staged poses.
Back in the office, those raw assets can be turned into a small, predictable set of
posts. One post each week can focus on progress, using before-and-after shots from
similar angles and a short caption explaining what was achieved. Another post can
feature a team member with a couple of lines about their role and why the project
matters to them. A third post might use a short clip as the basis for a one-minute
explanation of how you solved a specific challenge on the job.
With this approach, three or four small pieces of content from site can support an
entire week of activity on LinkedIn and any other relevant platform. Over a month,
your single project anchor will provide material for a full content calendar without
anyone having to invent ideas from scratch.
Captions do not need to be complex. For clients, explain what stage the project is at,
how you are managing quality and programme, and what the end result will deliver.
For potential recruits, describe the kind of work your teams get to do, the
responsibility they hold, and what working life on your jobs actually feels like.
The important thing is rhythm. By committing to one project, one site content lead,
and a regular flow of simple updates, you can move from occasional posts to a
consistent presence that reflects the strength of your delivery.
Ready to grow your construction company on LinkedIn?
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