Social Media & Content Management for Long Beach
Long Beach is a roughly 35,029-resident city in Nassau County next to Island Park and Atlantic Beach. The restaurants and gyms and fitness studios we work with here all run into the same problem: social media starts as a side project, gets posted in bursts when somebody has a free Tuesday, and then goes quiet for three weeks. Barrier-island city with a year-round downtown and a beach-driven summer surge. Restaurants, bars, surf shops, and personal-care services cluster on Park Avenue, West Beech Street, and the boardwalk side streets, which means consistency on Facebook, Instagram, and Google Business Profile compounds quickly when you commit to it. NOVA runs social media and content as a done-for-you service. We build a calendar that fits your business, write posts that actually sound like Long Beach — not a generic agency template — handle the photo and video work, watch the comments and DMs, and send a clean monthly report you can read in two minutes. Hyper-local content matters here. Posts that reference Long Beach boardwalk landmarks, neighbors like Island Park, and the rhythm of the Nassau County year outperform anything generic. That is what we build.
Where Long Beach businesses lose leads on social
Posting in bursts and then going dark for weeks — Facebook and Instagram followers stop seeing you, GBP loses its freshness signal.
No content strategy, no calendar, no idea what to post on Tuesday at 9am vs Saturday at noon.
Zero visibility into what is actually working — which post type drives calls, which platform drives appointments, what the trend looks like month over month.
How NOVA solves it
Content strategy and monthly calendar specific to Long Beach — not a recycled template — built around the customer rhythm of restaurants and studios and gyms.
Three to five posts per week across FB, IG, and GBP, including reels and short video where it fits.
Photo and video creation, including reels and short-form video shot at your location with simple direction.
Community management on the comment side and a monthly performance report so you can see exactly what social is producing.
Long Beach context
Long Islanders scroll Instagram and Facebook constantly, and they trust businesses they recognize from their feed long before they Google. In Long Beach, posts that reference local landmarks, neighbors like Island Park, school sports, and the Nassau County season cycle outperform anything generic by a wide margin. Consistency beats creativity — most restaurants and studios and gyms competitors abandon their pages after six months, so just showing up every week with content that sounds like a real Long Beach business puts you ahead of the pack.
Local anchors: Long Beach boardwalk, Long Beach LIRR station, Reynolds Channel, West End beaches, National Boulevard downtown.
Frequently asked questions
Long Beach: Let's talk social.
Plain English. One Long Island team. Month-to-month.