A theatre should consider outsourcing its paid social when campaigns are consuming time the team doesn’t have, results have plateaued, or Meta’s constant changes are outpacing in-house knowledge. The clearest tells: posts are being boosted rather than managed, and nobody can say what a production’s return on ad spend was. If either is true, specialist management typically pays for itself. Here’s how to judge it honestly, including when you shouldn’t outsource.
It’s worth being fully informed about the job before deciding who does it. Proper paid social management for a theatre means: a strategy per production built around its booking curve; potential multi-platform campaigns to maximise results; conversion campaigns (not boosted posts) with the Meta Pixel and Conversions API tracking the full ticketing journey; segmented booker audiences and retargeting; continual creative testing and refresh; budget monitoring and reallocation; and reporting that states KPIs, revenue and ROAS per production. It is a hands-on discipline, and since Meta made AI-driven Advantage+ the default in 2026, it changes fast.
When not to outsource: if you have almost no media budget (fix that first – management fees on tiny spend rarely make commercial sense), or if a capable in-house person simply needs training. A good agency will tell you so; training is often the better first step, and it’s a service we offer for exactly that reason.
| In-house | Freelancer | Specialist agency | |
| Cost | Salary + training + tools | Day rate; varies widely | Monthly fee, scales with scope |
| Expertise | Depends on hire; hard to keep current | Often strong but narrow; single point of failure | Current across accounts; sees what’s working now |
| Capacity | Full-time, but split across all marketing | Limited; you compete with other clients | Dedicated management with cover |
| Best for | Large venues with year-round programmes | Single productions, short runs | Venues and producers who want accountable, ongoing results |
The honest maths: a management fee is justified when the uplift it produces exceeds it. On meaningful media spend, the gap between boosted posts and properly managed conversion campaigns is usually far more than any fee; that gap is wasted budget you’re already paying for.
Can we outsource paid social for just one production?
Yes and it’s a sensible way to test an agency. One production gives you a clean before-and-after comparison on a real booking curve, however be aware there might be an agency set-up fee to consider.
Will we lose control of our brand voice?
You shouldn’t. A good agency works from your brand guidelines and assets with an approval workflow you set. You stay the voice; they make it perform.
What’s a good ROAS for theatre advertising?
It varies with ticket price, capacity and genre, so treat any universal benchmark with suspicion. The better questions: is ROAS measured properly, is it improving, and is it comfortably above break-even for that production?
How quickly should we see results?
Retargeting improvements show within weeks; the full picture takes one complete production cycle from announcement to closing night, or three-months. Judge a paid social partner over a testing period, not just one week.
What media budget do we need before an agency makes sense?
As a rule of thumb, if your annual paid social media spend is comfortably into four figures, management is worth pricing up. Below that, training your in-house team usually delivers more per pound.
Want the full playbook first? Read How to Sell More Theatre Tickets with Paid Social. Or if you’d rather hand it to specialists: Oh So Social manages paid social for theatres and venues including Hall for Cornwall; just get in touch to discuss your campaigns.