Meta has introduced Forum, a standalone app connected to Facebook Groups, giving group conversations a separate space away from the main Facebook feed.
The app lets users access their existing Facebook Groups, post with nicknames, follow discussions, and use AI-powered tools to find answers from group conversations. For influencer marketers, the release points to a familiar trend: social discovery keeps moving toward trusted communities, niche conversations, and peer-led recommendations.
Forum gives Facebook Groups their own dedicated app. Users sign in with Facebook, and their groups, profile, and activity carry over into the new experience. The app also lets users post with a nickname, which could make some discussions feel less tied to a full Facebook profile.
The experience still connects back to Facebook. Posts made through Forum can appear in the relevant Facebook Groups, so Meta hasn’t created a separate community network from scratch. Instead, it has taken an existing Facebook feature and placed it inside a cleaner, discussion-led product.
Meta has tried a separate Groups app before. Facebook launched a dedicated Groups app in 2014 and later discontinued it in 2017. The timing looks different now.
Reddit has trained users to search for real advice inside community threads. TikTok has pushed discovery into comments, creators, and recommendations. AI tools have also made old discussions more valuable because useful answers can resurface through generated responses. Meta seems to see fresh value in Facebook Groups because they already contain years of user questions, opinions, and recommendations. Forum gives that content a more focused home. The move also follows other recent Meta product activity, including its paid Plus plans for Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp.
Influencer marketing has moved beyond public feed posts. Creators now build trust through comments, private groups, newsletters, Reddit threads, and other community spaces where conversations continue after a campaign post goes live.
Forum fits that shift. It could give creators and brands a clearer place to answer product questions, share recommendations, and stay close to niche audiences with stronger intent.
That makes Forum relevant to the wider relationship between influencer marketing and affiliate marketing, where creator trust can support awareness, recommendations, and measurable action. But brands still need restraint. Useful answers, clear disclosure, and respect for group rules will matter more than dropping links.
Reddit marketing has become more important because users often search Reddit for honest opinions, product advice, and niche recommendations before making decisions. That trust is what makes community-led discovery valuable.
Forum appears to chase some of the same behavior through Facebook Groups. Meta may be looking to give users a cleaner space for topic-led conversations, peer recommendations, and searchable community answers.
The comparison has limits. Reddit has its own culture, moderation style, and search habits. But Forum still suggests Meta wants Facebook Groups to play a bigger role in discovery, especially as Reddit marketing and AI visibility become more closely connected.
Forum’s AI-powered Ask tab could make group content easier to find after the original conversation ends. Instead of relying only on fresh posts or active threads, users may be able to surface answers from older Facebook Group discussions. Helpful posts, product explainers, and clear recommendations could keep influencing discovery long after they’re published.
It also fits a wider shift in AI-led search behavior, where answers increasingly pull from useful content rather than sending users through a traditional feed or search journey. For affiliate teams, that makes community content more important to watch, especially as AI agents begin changing affiliate traffic patterns.
Forum gives marketers a few practical points to consider before treating it as a campaign channel.
Forum may stay small. Meta’s previous Groups app didn’t last, and users don’t adopt every standalone app Meta releases. Still, Forum gives marketers a clear signal. Meta wants more value from group discussions, AI-assisted answers, and interest-led communities. That puts Facebook Groups closer to the same discovery conversation already happening around Reddit, creator communities, and AI search.
For influencer marketers, the practical takeaway feels clear enough: community content now sits inside the discovery journey. Reach still matters, but trust carries more weight when users ask for recommendations, compare options, and look for people who have already solved the same problem. Forum gives Meta a new place to test that behavior. The harder question for brands: can they show up in community spaces without making them worse?