Your HubSpot social media accounts show as "connected" in the settings. The green checkmarks are there. Everything looks fine from a technical standpoint.
But when you check your actual social profiles, nothing's been posted from HubSpot in months.
You're not alone. I see this constantly when auditing portals. Marketing teams connect their Facebook and LinkedIn accounts during initial setup, maybe post a few test updates, then move on to other priorities. Months later, they wonder why their social media strategy isn't working through HubSpot.
The problem isn't your connection. It's that nobody's actually using HubSpot social publishing after the initial setup.
Most portals I work with have this same pattern. Social accounts connected in month one. Maybe a handful of posts in month two. Then complete radio silence.
It's not a technical failure. Your Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter integrations work fine. The issue is workflow.
Your marketing team creates content, gets excited to share it, and posts directly to social media without thinking about HubSpot. This creates a visibility problem. Your boss asks about social media ROI, and your HubSpot reports show basically zero activity.
Meanwhile, you're posting constantly on social media, but none of that activity gets tracked or measured in your CRM. You're doing the work but getting zero credit for it in your marketing analytics.
When you post directly on social platforms instead of through HubSpot, you lose three critical things.
First, attribution tracking disappears. Someone sees your LinkedIn post, clicks through to your website, and eventually converts into a lead. HubSpot has no idea that social media played a role in that conversion. Your social media looks like it's generating zero leads when it might be driving significant results.
Second, you can't measure social performance alongside your other marketing activities. Your email campaigns, blog posts, and ads all get tracked in HubSpot, but social media exists in a separate universe. You're missing the complete picture of how your channels work together.
Third, you're duplicating effort. You create content, manually post it across multiple platforms, then manually track engagement in each platform's native analytics. HubSpot social publishing lets you post everywhere at once and see all the performance data in one place.
Here's the typical workflow I see: your team writes a blog post, feels motivated to promote it, opens LinkedIn and Twitter directly, and shares the post with custom captions for each platform.
It's fast, it feels natural, and the posts go live immediately. But they're completely invisible to your HubSpot tracking.
The blog post shows up in your HubSpot analytics. The email promoting the blog post gets tracked. But the social media promotion that might drive the most traffic? Totally dark to your CRM.
This happens because using HubSpot social publishing feels like an extra step when you're in creation mode. You finish writing something great, and you want to share it right away. Opening another tool and scheduling posts feels like friction.
But that "friction" is actually integration. Every post you schedule through HubSpot becomes part of your marketing attribution chain.
Search for the social media settings in your HubSpot portal. Look at your connected accounts. You'll probably see Facebook, LinkedIn, maybe Twitter or Instagram with green "Connected" status indicators.
Now check your recent social activity in the same section. If you see posts from the last week, you're already building good habits. If the most recent activity is from months ago, you need a workflow change.
The connection is working fine. The problem is usage.
Most teams connect social media accounts during their initial HubSpot setup, then never return to actually publish through the platform. It's like buying a gym membership and never going to the gym. The membership works, but you're not getting any stronger.
The biggest barrier isn't technical complexity. It's remembering to use the tool you already have access to.
Your team has muscle memory for posting directly on social platforms. You probably have the apps on your phone. When you want to share something, you go straight to the source.
Building a new habit requires changing this automatic behavior. Instead of opening LinkedIn when you want to share an update, you need to remember to open HubSpot first.
Most marketing teams try to change this behavior through willpower and reminders. That works for a few days, then everyone reverts to the old way of doing things.
Better approach: make HubSpot social publishing part of your content creation process, not a separate step afterward.
When you finish writing a blog post, immediately draft the social promotion posts in HubSpot before you publish the blog. This makes social publishing part of the content creation process instead of a separate task you remember later.
Set up templates for your most common social post types. Blog promotion, event announcements, company updates, industry commentary. Having templates makes it faster to create posts through HubSpot than to craft them from scratch on each platform.
Most portals I audit have LinkedIn and Facebook connected but skip Twitter, Instagram, or other platforms their audience actually uses. Check which social networks drive traffic to your website, then make sure all of them are connected to HubSpot.
The goal is to publish everywhere your audience lives, all from one tool, with complete tracking on every post.
Your boss doesn't care about green checkmarks in your social media settings. They care about leads and revenue attribution.
When all your social media publishing runs through HubSpot, you can finally show which social posts drive website traffic, email signups, and actual customers. You can compare social media performance against your other marketing channels with real data.
More importantly, you can optimize your social strategy based on what actually works, not what feels like it should work.
Wondering if you have similar gaps in your portal setup? Many marketing teams discover they're only using a fraction of the HubSpot features they're paying for. A quick audit of your portal can show you exactly what needs attention and what quick wins you're missing.