Pinned-Post Badge & Filter: Spot What a Page Wants You to See First

A clear badge on every pinned post, plus a filter to isolate them, so you always know exactly what a page chose to put front and center.

The problem

A pinned post isn't like the others on a page: out of everything it's ever published, it's the one post the owner deliberately chose to plant at the top for every visitor to see first, the closest thing Facebook gives a page to a direct statement of what it wants you to see. Once a profile lands in your PostSnag dashboard, that signal disappears: the pinned post looks exactly like the hundreds around it, so knowing what a page currently has pinned means leaving PostSnag and checking manually, profile by profile. That gets expensive across twenty tracked profiles, and pins change, so miss the window and there's no record it ever happened.

What we're building

A clear, visible badge on any post that's currently pinned, shown the moment you open a profile, paired with a dedicated filter that isolates pinned posts across your entire library at once. Both read off data PostSnag is already capturing when you scan a profile.

  • A visible badge on the post card and in the full post detail view.

  • A dedicated filter to isolate pinned posts, layered with your existing filters.

  • Captured automatically as part of the scan you're already running, no extra step.


How it works for you

Open any profile and the pinned post, if it has one, carries the badge right on the card. Switch on the pinned filter across your whole library and every tracked profile's featured post lines up together.

What you get

  • Instant visibility into what a page is currently featuring, with no trip to Facebook.

  • A read on editorial intent, not just performance: what a page wants to be known for.

  • Faster competitive research: skim what an entire niche is choosing to lead with at once.

For example

Researching ten home renovation contractor pages, you flip on the pinned filter and see seven of the ten are using their pin for a lead-capture offer, a free quote form or a guide, rather than a portfolio piece. That's invisible scrolling regular feeds one page at a time.

What it unlocks

The pinned badge plugs into how you already read a profile, and paired with snapshot history, a pin that changes over time becomes its own trend. Because the badge shows what a page believes is its best post while overperformance shows what actually performed best, running both together surfaces a real gap.

Who it's for

Marketers and agencies profiling competitors, researchers studying how a niche presents itself, and anyone who wants to know what a page is prioritizing without opening Facebook.

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Upvoters
Status

Planned

Board
💡

Feature Request

Date

1 day ago

Author

PostSnag

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