Introduction to Bluesky

Bluesky is not just another social app with a blue logo. It is a text-first social network built on open technology that lets people own their identity, choose how their feed works, and move between services without starting over. That combination attracted millions of users who wanted public conversation without the chaos of the largest legacy networks, and it created a window where brands can show up early while the culture is still forming.

This chapter explains what Bluesky actually is, how it works at a high level, and why it matters for anyone deciding where to spend their social media time in 2026.

What is Bluesky?

A public conversation network

Bluesky works like the classic short-post social format many people already know. You publish text, images, or links. People follow you, reply, repost, or like your posts. Conversations happen in public threads. The difference is not the surface behavior but what sits underneath: your account, your posts, and your social graph can live on open infrastructure rather than being locked inside one company's database forever.

Built on the AT Protocol

Bluesky runs on the Authenticated Transfer Protocol, often called the AT Protocol. In plain terms, that means your identity and your data are designed to be portable. You get a handle like username.bsky.social, but the system is built so that identity could eventually move to your own domain or another provider without losing your followers or history. For brands, that is a long-term stability signal: you are not renting an audience on rented land with no exit path.

Custom feeds change what users see

Most social apps give you one algorithm and you take it or leave it. Bluesky lets users subscribe to custom feeds built by developers, creators, and communities. A feed might surface only posts about web design, only posts from people you follow, or only posts that match a specific topic filter. For brands, this matters because discovery is not limited to one ranking system. Good content can spread through niche feeds where the audience is already interested in your category.

Why does Bluesky matter for brands?

Early audience with high attention

Bluesky grew quickly among journalists, technologists, designers, writers, and people who care about how the internet works. That audience is smaller than the largest networks but often more engaged per follower. A thoughtful post can travel far because the feed is less saturated with paid content and recycled viral clips. Brands that show up with a genuine voice, not a corporate broadcast tone, can build recognition faster than they would on a mature platform where every category already has entrenched players.

Text-first culture rewards clarity

Bluesky is not a video-first entertainment feed. It rewards clear writing, useful threads, and timely commentary. Brands that can explain an idea in a few sharp sentences, share a behind-the-scenes insight, or join a conversation with something specific to add fit naturally. Brands that only post generic promotional graphics without a point of view struggle here for the same reason they struggle on any text-heavy network.

Open infrastructure and trust

Users on Bluesky often care about transparency, data ownership, and how platforms treat creators. A brand that respects those values, links to its own site instead of trapping people in the app, and participates honestly in public conversation earns trust that translates into follows, reposts, and website visits. That trust layer is part of what makes Bluesky different from a closed app where users feel like the product.

For who actually uses the platform and what that audience expects, see Bluesky audience and decentralized culture. To decide whether your brand belongs here, see who should be on Bluesky. For how the underlying technology works, see how Bluesky AT Protocol works.

How does your website connect to Bluesky?

Bluesky sends interested visitors to your website when your posts include links, when people search for your brand after seeing your handle, or when a conversation on the feed points back to something you published elsewhere. Without a clear website destination and analytics that show what Bluesky traffic does when it arrives, you are guessing whether the channel produces anything beyond likes and replies.

WEMASY's website builder gives you the professional pages Bluesky conversations point to, and WEMASY's Analytics and Insights shows how much traffic arrives from social channels and whether those visitors convert. See what is included at /pricing.

Frequently asked questions

Is Bluesky free for brands to use?

How is Bluesky different from traditional social networks?

Do you need a large following to get reach on Bluesky?

Can brands run ads on Bluesky?

What should a brand post first on Bluesky?

Is Bluesky still growing?