There’s a quiet revolution happening on the internet and it smells a lot better than a clogged drain.
If you’ve spent any time on TikTok or Instagram lately, you’ve probably noticed a new wave of content creators doing something unexpected: telling you not to buy things. Not to try things. Not to DIY things. This is the “deinfluencing” movement and after years of viral life hacks convincing homeowners they could fix anything with a $4 drain snake and a YouTube tutorial, it’s finally coming for the plumbing space.
Good. It’s long overdue.
The Rise and Fall of the #PlumbingHack Era
Between 2020 and 2024, home improvement content exploded. Stuck at home, millions of people discovered the quiet satisfaction of fixing things themselves. TikTok is filled with satisfying drain-cleaning videos. Instagram reels showed sparkling pipes after a quick baking soda and vinegar flush. Pinterest boards titled “Home Hacks That Will Change Your Life” got pinned millions of times.
The problem? Most of it was theater.
Baking soda and vinegar don’t actually dissolve grease. Cheap plastic drain snakes often push clogs deeper rather than removing them. And that satisfying “gurgling flush” after a DIY treatment? Usually, just water moving through air pockets is not a solved blockage.
The plumbing industry watched this era with a kind of horrified fascination. Professionals increasingly found themselves being called in not just to fix the original problem, but to fix the damage caused by the DIY fix. Corroded pipes from overuse of chemical drain cleaners. Cracked fixtures from over-tightening. Worsened blockages that had been “treated” six times before anyone called a real plumber.
What Deinfluencing Actually Teaches Us
The deinfluencing movement isn’t anti-DIY, it’s pro-truth. Its creators are saying: some things are genuinely worth your money, and some problems are genuinely beyond your skill level.
For home and business owners, this reframing is everything.
Drain maintenance and plumbing care fall squarely into a category that deinfluencers are starting to call “invisible infrastructure,” the systems in your home or building you never think about until they catastrophically fail. And that’s exactly where the self-help content ecosystem has done the most damage, because the consequences of a DIY mistake aren’t immediately visible.
You won’t see the pipe slowly corroding behind your wall. You won’t notice the partial blockage building up over three months into something much worse. You won’t feel the problem until you really feel the problem.
The Business Owner Blind Spot
This is especially true for commercial property managers and small business owners, who are often managing a dozen priorities simultaneously and have absorbed the same “you can handle it yourself” messaging as everyone else.
Here’s what’s rarely discussed in those viral videos: commercial plumbing systems operate at completely different pressures, scales, and regulatory requirements than residential ones. A restaurant with a slow-draining floor drain isn’t dealing with the same problem as a homeowner with a sluggish bathroom sink. The stakes for health codes, operational continuity, and liability are orders of magnitude higher.
For anyone running a business, the deinfluencing mindset should apply doubly: the ROI on professional plumbing maintenance is almost always positive when you factor in what a disruption actually costs. A flooded kitchen shuts your restaurant down. A backed-up sewer system in an office building is a health code violation. These aren’t inconveniences; they’re business-ending events if ignored long enough.
The smartest business owners we’ve spoken to treat drain maintenance the way they treat accounting: they know enough to know they should outsource it. You can click here to learn what proactive commercial drain care actually looks like from professionals like Drain Guys who do this every day.
The New Standard: Informed, Not Just Hands-On
What the deinfluencing era is really asking for is a smarter relationship with expertise. Not blind deference but honest acknowledgment of where the limits of self-help actually are.
For your home, this might mean-
- Knowing the difference between a slow drain caused by hair buildup (genuinely manageable with the right tool) vs. a slow drain caused by root intrusion or pipe scale (absolutely a job for a professional).
- Understanding that liquid drain cleaners are emergency measures, not maintenance strategies.
- Getting a camera inspection done on an older home’s pipes before a problem develops, not after.
For your business, it likely means having a service agreement in place before you need one because emergency call-outs are always more expensive than scheduled maintenance, and the disruption during business hours costs far more than people calculate.
The Most Honest Thing the Internet Has Said About Home Care
The deinfluencing trend is, at its core, a credibility movement. Its creators and consumers alike are getting tired of aspirational content that doesn’t match reality.
In the plumbing world, reality is this: pipes are forgiving up to a point, and merciless past it. The viral hack era convinced a generation of homeowners that staying ahead of drain issues was simple and cheap. The deinfluencing era is correctly identifying that preventing drain problems is simple and cheap but only when done right, and only when you know which problems actually need a professional.
That’s not a discouraging message. It’s a freeing one. You don’t have to know how to do everything. You have to know what to handle yourself, and who to call when you don’t.
For drain and plumbing care that doesn’t ask you to pretend you know more than you do, click here.
