A ready-to-customize social media policy template covering brand voice guidelines, content approval workflows, employee social media use, crisis response procedures, FTC compliance, and enforcement protocols. Built for marketing teams, HR departments, and legal teams who need a clear, enforceable policy without starting from scratch.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 12 min
| Section | What It Covers | Who Owns It |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Purpose & Scope | Why the policy exists, who it applies to | HR / Legal |
| 2. Brand Voice | Tone, style, approved language, brand personality | Marketing |
| 3. Content Approval | Review workflow, who approves, timelines | Marketing Lead |
| 4. Employee Guidelines | Personal vs. professional use, dos and don’ts | HR |
| 5. Crisis Response | Escalation, pause protocols, response procedures | Communications / PR |
| 6. Legal Compliance | FTC, copyright, GDPR, NLRA, industry regulations | Legal |
| 7. Prohibited Content | Content categories that must never be posted | Legal / HR |
| 8. Monitoring & Enforcement | How compliance is tracked, consequences | HR / Marketing |
Social media policy is a company document that outlines how employees and official brand accounts should behave on social media platforms, covering both professional and personal use where the company may be affected.
| Dimension | Scale (1-5) | Your Brand | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formal ← → Casual | [1-5] | [Your score] | 1: “We are pleased to announce” / 5: “Big news, folks” |
| Serious ← → Humorous | [1-5] | [Your score] | 1: Data-driven statements / 5: Memes and jokes |
| Technical ← → Simple | [1-5] | [Your score] | 1: Industry jargon / 5: Plain language only |
| Reserved ← → Enthusiastic | [1-5] | [Your score] | 1: Understated / 5: Exclamation marks everywhere |
| Tier | Content Type | Approval Required | Turnaround |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1: Self-Publish | Scheduled posts within approved content calendar, Stories, comment replies, reshares of approved content | Social media manager | Immediate |
| Tier 2: Peer Review | New campaign content, collaborations, user-generated content reshares, trend-jacking posts | Social media manager + Marketing lead | Same day |
| Tier 3: Leadership Review | Paid ad creative, influencer partnerships, crisis response posts, anything referencing competitors | Marketing lead + Department head | 24 hours |
| Tier 4: Legal Review | Claims about product performance, contest/giveaway rules, financial data, health claims, employee testimonials used in ads | Legal + Marketing lead | 48-72 hours |
“The social media policy isn’t where you manage a crisis. It’s where you establish the rules that prevent most crises from happening in the first place. Every brand we’ve worked with that had a serious social media incident had either no policy, an outdated one, or a policy nobody had read. The policy is the prevention layer. The crisis plan is the response layer.” Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Violation Level | Examples | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Level 1: Coaching | Minor tone inconsistency, missing hashtag, posting outside schedule | Verbal coaching, policy review |
| Level 2: Written Warning | Repeated minor violations, unapproved content published, missing disclosures | Written warning, mandatory training |
| Level 3: Formal Discipline | Sharing confidential information, discriminatory content, posting unauthorized client data | Formal disciplinary action per HR policy |
| Level 4: Termination | Intentional brand sabotage, sharing trade secrets, repeated Level 3 violations | Termination per employment agreement |
Get the complete template with all 8 sections, fill-in-the-blank language, example posts, and a one-page quick reference card for daily use. Download Free Template
Yes. Any company with employees who use social media (which is virtually every company) needs a social media policy. Without one, you have no framework for addressing policy violations, no brand consistency across accounts, and no legal protection against employee missteps. Even a 2-page policy is better than none.
Partially. Companies can prohibit sharing confidential information and require disclosure of employment relationships. However, the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) protects employees’ rights to discuss wages, working conditions, and organize with colleagues on social media. Policies cannot prohibit this protected activity. Always have legal counsel review employee social media restrictions.
Review your social media policy annually at minimum. Update it within 30 days of any major platform policy change, after any social media crisis, when adopting new platforms, and when regulations change (like FTC updates). The policy should have a named owner responsible for triggering reviews.
The FTC requires disclosure of all material connections between brands and endorsers. In 2025-2026, this includes: verbal and written disclosure in video content, disclosure of AI tool use in sponsored content creation, placing disclosures where they are hard to miss (before the ‘See more’ fold), and using clear language like ‘#Ad’ or ‘#Sponsored’ rather than vague tags.
Keep the core policy under 5 pages. Longer policies don’t get read. Supplement the main policy with a one-page quick reference card for daily use and a detailed appendix for edge cases. The goal is a document that employees will actually read and remember, not a comprehensive legal document that gathers dust.
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