At Lightspan, we focus on having conversations with real people on social media. However, we know you can’t be online all the time – everyone needs a break!
Scheduling Tweets for those times your targets are online but you aren’t is a great way to expand your reach, build brand awareness and drive more traffic to your site. Using a tool such as Hootsuite—a social media monitoring platform and management dashboard—you can schedule posts ahead of time. If you’re a savvy social media user, you’ve already taken advantage of this feature. But, did you know you can schedule as many as 350 at one time?
Why schedule posts in bulk?
Let’s say you want to promote a bunch of old blog posts that are still relevant to your followers. You can create several tweets promoting various highlights from the article at one time, enter the copy into a spreadsheet, add the article link, set the days and times and upload the tweets at once. Not only does this drive traffic to your original content, but it also will promote your content to your targets who may not have been following you weeks or months ago.
Don’t delay! Use this quick and easy tool today. Here’s how:
Step 1: Log in to your Hootsuite account. Go to “Publisher” and then select “Content”. If this is your first time using Hootsuite, click “Try Bulk Composer BETA”. If you have used this before, just click “Bulk Composer” from the “Content Sources” area.
Step 2: Select “Download example” to start a sample in csv file.
Step 3: Open the sample file in Google Sheets or any program that supports csv format. Please note that the date format may change when you open a file in Microsoft Excel. You may set the date format to general instead of date.
Step 4: Fill in the file with your content using the formatting rules below. Then, save or export the file to csv. Please note that duplicate posts are not allowed.
COLUMN A | COLUMN B | COLUMN C |
Enter a post date and time (24-hour format) at least 20 minutes from upload time and must end in either a 5 or a 0 (e.g. 11:35 or 12:40). Always remember that it’s only one post at one specific time slot. Use only one date format throughout your CSV. Here are acceptable date formats:
| Start creating your post. Only limit characters to 280 including the URL which usually has a maximum of 23 characters. | The full URL link should be entered. This is optional though you can choose to automatically shorten to Ow.ly links when you upload to the Bulk Composer. |
Step 1: Upload your posts in bulk
Step 2: Review Posts and Edit errors
Check posts if they are listed with red banners that have issues. Select a post that contains errors and edit it otherwise, it cannot be scheduled unless it is fixed. You also have the option to delete posts. Red banners on longer appear when errors are fixed.
Step 3: Review and customize
Select “schedule all posts” or you may select posts individually to review and edit them before scheduling. You may also do the following: preview the post, add an image or video, remove or customize the link preview and edit the scheduled time. You may edit the post after it is scheduled by opening and editing it in Publisher.
Step 4: Schedule
Select “Schedule” to schedule a post individually. You can also delete selection in the list using the checkbox and select “Schedule all posts”. Once all posts are scheduled you may select “View scheduled posts” to customize them. You can also filter scheduled posts by social account. Posts that were not scheduled will be discarded when you leave the Bulk Composer.
Try these easy steps now!
If you want to learn more, don’t hesitate to contact us.
In social media marketing we seek to develop strategies that will reach the right audiences…
Meta recently published a guide to explain video distribution on Facebook, in which they share…
Hi friends, With the seemingly never-ending series of awful events and news, it’s been hard…
Study Associates Changes In Facebook’s Algorithm With Amplified Local Republican Parties’ Posts [skip to the…
This week I’m diving into some unique topics that we need to talk about more: …
What the heck happened this week? Besides the Supreme Court writing, “that the right to…