What each platform actually does in 2026

Instagram and TikTok are both short-form video platforms, but they serve different roles in the customer journey. Understanding that difference is the starting point for any NZ business making a platform decision.

Instagram is where people go to research brands they are already interested in. Users check your profile, read your bio, look at your grid, and then decide whether to follow, enquire, or book. The discovery is often search-driven or recommendation-driven, and the intent to act is higher.

TikTok is a passive discovery engine. Users are not searching for you — the algorithm surfaces content to them based on watch behaviour. This means your reach potential is enormous, but the audience is less likely to have existing purchase intent. They need to be warmed up before they convert.

The NZ audience breakdown

New Zealand has roughly 3.5 million social media users, according to DataReportal's 2026 New Zealand Digital Report. The platform split matters for local businesses:

If your ideal customer is 35 or older, or if you sell a service that requires trust before purchase (trades, professional services, hospitality), Instagram gives you a more direct path to that customer. If you sell to a younger demographic and your product is highly visual or trend-friendly, TikTok can accelerate your growth significantly.

Content effort: what each platform demands

Both platforms require video, but the style and volume expectations are different.

Factor Instagram TikTok
Posting frequency 3 to 5 times per week (Reels + Stories) 1 to 2 videos per day for growth
Video length 7 to 90 seconds (Reels), 15s Stories 15 to 60 seconds performs best
Content style Polished, branded, consistent grid aesthetic Raw, authentic, trend-reactive
Caption strategy Important for reach and saves Minimal; hook in first 2 seconds is everything
Community management High (DMs, comments, Stories replies) Medium (comments, Duets)
Profile as sales tool Strong (link-in-bio, Highlights, grid) Weak (one link, minimal profile real estate)

For most NZ small businesses, managing TikTok well requires significantly more raw video output. Instagram allows for more planned, scheduled content creation with a production session once or twice a week.

TikTok app on iPhone screen Person viewing social media on smartphone

Which platform drives more sales for NZ businesses

Instagram drives more direct sales for most NZ service businesses. The reason is the shorter customer journey. A potential customer sees your Reel, visits your profile, reads your bio and Highlights, clicks your link, and books or enquires. That full path can happen in under three minutes.

On TikTok, the path is longer. A viewer sees your video, may not visit your profile at all, might see you again a week later, and eventually searches for you on Google or Instagram before making contact. The awareness-to-action gap is wider.

The exception is product-based businesses with visually appealing products, particularly food, beauty, fashion, and homewares. TikTok Shop and viral product moments can drive significant direct sales when the product-audience fit is right. But these are typically businesses with a strong visual product and the capacity to produce daily content.

The case for starting with Instagram

For most NZ businesses at the start of their social media journey, Instagram offers the best return on time invested. Here is why:

Once your Instagram content system is working — consistent posting, a strategy that generates saves and follows, and a clear enquiry flow — adding TikTok becomes much lower effort. You are simply repurposing content you are already making, rather than building a second content operation from scratch.

The Devy Agency recommendation

Start with Instagram. Build your content pillars, posting rhythm, and enquiry flow there first. Once you are publishing consistently and seeing results, repurpose your best-performing Reels to TikTok. You will grow both platforms without doubling your workload.

When TikTok should come first

There are specific scenarios where TikTok is the right primary platform for a NZ business:

Even in these cases, having an Instagram presence alongside TikTok is important. When someone discovers you on TikTok, they often look you up on Instagram to verify your credibility. An abandoned or sparse Instagram profile can cost you the follow even when TikTok is your primary growth channel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should NZ businesses use TikTok or Instagram in 2026?
Most NZ businesses should start with Instagram and add TikTok once their content system is working. Instagram offers stronger local targeting, higher purchase intent from NZ audiences, and a more complete ecosystem including Stories, Grid, Reels, DMs, and link-in-bio. TikTok is better for raw reach and brand awareness with younger audiences.
Does TikTok work for local NZ businesses?
TikTok works well for NZ businesses targeting audiences under 35. It drives high reach and brand awareness but lower purchase intent than Instagram for local service businesses. If your product is visual or trend-friendly and your audience is young, TikTok can grow an account fast. For service businesses targeting professionals or older demographics, Instagram is the stronger choice.
How much time does it take to manage TikTok vs Instagram?
Instagram requires consistent output across multiple formats: Reels, Stories, grid posts, and DMs. TikTok requires less posting volume but higher video quality and trend awareness. For a small NZ business, managing both well takes 8 to 12 hours per week. Most businesses working with an agency reduce this to near zero hours of their own time.
Which platform gets more sales for NZ businesses?
Instagram drives more direct sales for most NZ service businesses, particularly in food, hospitality, fitness, and professional services. The link-in-bio, DM enquiry flow, and Stories with direct CTAs create a shorter path from viewer to customer. TikTok drives awareness but the purchase journey is typically longer and less predictable.

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