What’s In & What’s Out: Vintage Marketing for 2026
by Sloane Middleton Mann
Planning ahead is key to a successful marketing plan, so let’s talk about what’s working—and what isn’t—when it comes to marketing your vintage shop in the new year.
While the last week of December tends to be a slow shopping period, it’s a great time to strategize and set your business up for success. To help you get started, here are three key areas where vintage sellers are either getting it fabulously right—or going terribly wrong—when it comes to standing out online.
If you want to dive deeper into marketing strategies for vintage shops, be sure to check out @business.of.vintage on Instagram or reach out directly for 1:1 support.
IN: Storytelling on Social Media
When considering what to post on social media, always put yourself in your audience’s shoes.
Why are people opening these apps multiple times a day? To be entertained, educated, or connected—not to shop.
That insight should drive every post you make. The vintage world is full of beautiful stories: where a piece came from, how you sourced it, its design history, or even the funny mishap that happened on the way to market.
Instead of simply showcasing products, create context and emotion around them. Content that invites people into your process builds trust—and trust leads to sales.
OUT: Product Photography on Social Media
Let’s be honest: if your only social media strategy is to post product photos, it’s time to stop.
That approach wastes valuable time and won’t generate engagement or sales.
If you’re willing to think more strategically, combine product photography with storytelling or educational content. Add text overlays, captions, or video commentary to create interest.
If you’re not open to a storytelling approach, skip social media entirely and invest your energy in uploading product photos directly to sales channels instead of marketing channels.
IN: Live Selling
Technology has finally captured the excitement of a live auction through live sales—via apps like WhatNot and features like Instagram Live and TikTok Live.
These platforms allow vintage sellers to connect with their audience in real time, creating an interactive experience that builds urgency, trust, and community.
Live selling works best when approached like a show: think pacing, personality, and preparation. Talk about pieces in your own voice, answer questions on the spot, and share styling or sourcing tips. Viewers are more likely to buy when they feel part of something
exciting and exclusive.
2025 was just the beginning. Expect live selling to skyrocket in 2026, especially for higher-end vintage home and fashion sellers.
OUT: Story Sales
The “Stories” feature on social media is more popular than ever—but primarily for community building, not direct selling.
Research on Instagram shows a sharp drop-off in Story views after just two slides. The longer your Story, the more engagement you lose, and the less often Instagram pushes your content to followers.
Story Sales, with 20+ slides and little use of engagement features, simply aren’t optimized for growth.
Instead, use Stories to build excitement about what’s coming to your shop or website. Record yourself talking about new pieces and use closed captions so followers can watch without sound.
IN: Peek Behind the Curtain
People want to connect with people. Show the behind-the-scenes moments that make your business come alive—sourcing trips, restocking booths, packaging orders, or simply the daily grind.
These moments are relatable, raw, and real. You don’t need fancy equipment or curated perfection; just share what your day looks like and what drives you. This transparency builds emotional connections and reminds customers that shopping with you supports a real person with passion and purpose.
Tip: Frame your behind-the-scenes posts around a goal—it gives your audience something to root for.
OUT: Being Perfect
The pendulum has swung. After nearly a decade of polished, filtered social media, audiences now crave authenticity over perfection.
Perfection feels artificial—and frankly, boring.
Social media is, and always has been, about connection. The brands that thrive are those willing to be honest, vulnerable, and human.
Invite your customers into your world—not just your business. Share the learning moments, the challenges, and the passion that fuels your work. When you open your heart, you open the door to genuine connection.
Sloane Middleton Mann is the founder of Business of Vintage, the world’s only marketing agency specialized for vintage and antique shops. Follow @business.of.vintage on Instagram for vintage marketing tips & guides.

