A thriving Facebook group is one of the most powerful owned marketing assets a business can have—but managing it requires daily attention. Approving member requests, removing spam, posting engagement questions, responding to comments, and enforcing community rules is a full-time moderation job that most founders and community managers simply cannot sustain alone. A Facebook group management virtual assistant keeps your community active, safe, and growing so you can focus on serving your members rather than policing the space. This guide covers what a Facebook group VA does, what skills they need, what to pay, and how to hire one.
What This VA Does
| Task | Details |
|---|---|
| Member approval | Reviews and approves or declines new member requests based on your community criteria |
| Welcome posts | Creates and posts personalized or templated welcome messages for new members |
| Content moderation | Removes spam, enforces community rules, and manages member warnings or bans |
| Daily engagement posts | Posts discussion questions, polls, and prompts to maintain activity levels |
| Comment monitoring | Monitors and responds to comments on group posts to keep conversations alive |
| Event promotion | Announces upcoming events, webinars, or offers within the group |
| Analytics reporting | Tracks member growth, engagement rate, and top-performing posts weekly |
| Collaboration management | Coordinates with other admins or moderators through shared dashboards |
Skills and Tools Required
A Facebook group management VA needs strong communication skills, community-first thinking, and the ability to enforce rules diplomatically without creating conflict. They should understand Facebook's group features deeply—badges, admin tools, featured posts, and membership questions.
Key tools: Facebook Groups native admin tools, Meta Business Suite, Slack or Asana for internal communication, Google Sheets or Airtable for tracking member activity, and Canva for creating branded engagement graphics.
What to Pay
| Level | Rate |
|---|---|
| Entry | $7–$12/hr |
| Mid | $12–$20/hr |
| Specialist | $20–$28/hr |
Daily monitoring retainers (typically 1–2 hours/day, billed monthly) are the most common pricing model for ongoing Facebook group management.
How to Hire
Document your community rules clearly before hiring. A VA cannot enforce standards that don't exist in writing. Create a one-page community guidelines document that covers what's allowed, what gets removed immediately, and when to escalate to you directly.
When interviewing, ask candidates how they've handled a situation where a member violated community rules but had a large following. Good community managers understand the balance between enforcement and relationship preservation. Ask for examples of engagement posts they've written and how they measure community health.
Set up admin access with appropriate permissions before your VA starts—grant moderation access but keep admin-level controls (like deleting the group or changing settings) restricted to you.
"A well-managed Facebook group can generate more leads per month than a paid ad campaign—but only if someone is showing up every day." — Online community strategist
For related reading, see our guides on virtual assistant for Discord server management and virtual assistant social media management.
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