Weekly content planning in GetMePost
How to set a 7-day publishing rhythm, use the queue, and never miss prime time.
Published: April 25, 2026
Why plan a week ahead
Daily last-minute writing = stress and low quality. Weekly planning:
- Lets you write in batches (1 session for 5–7 posts).
- Keeps consistent presence in prime time, even on rough days.
- Gives time for better edits — you come back to a post fresh.
Step 1. Define the weekly rhythm
Decide how many posts per day and when. A proven schedule for LinkedIn B2B:
- Mon, Wed, Fri — 9:00 and 17:00 (substantive post + short engagement)
- Tue, Thu — 9:00 (one post)
- Sat, Sun — break or lifestyle/personal
Don’t copy — test on your audience. The GetMePost dashboard shows hours when your followers are most active.
Step 2. Batch generation
In one session generate 5–10 posts. Click “New post”, enter a topic, pick platforms, generate. Repeat.
Pro tip: keep a list of 20+ topics in a simple doc. Don’t start a batch without topics — you’ll waste 30 minutes on “what should I write”.
Step 3. Edit in review mode
After generating, don’t publish right away. Come back to posts after 30 minutes or a day later — you’ll catch weak hooks, awkward sentences, boring CTAs.
The GetMePost editor shows all versions (LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook) side by side. Edit in one view.
Step 4. Schedule the whole week
Each post → click “Schedule” → pick date and hour. The system shows a week calendar with scheduled posts — you see gaps and overload.
Publishing queue:
- You pick preferred time slots (e.g. Mon-Fri 9:00 and 17:00).
- You drop a post into the queue — the system assigns the next free slot.
- No manual date setting.
Step 5. Monitor and adjust
After a week check the dashboard — which posts had the most reach and engagement. Replicate patterns that work. Drop those that don’t.
Most common mistakes
- Too many posts at the start — 2/day after a year-long break = burnout. Start at 3/week, scale up.
- Inconsistent timing — algorithms reward regularity.
- Publishing the same content on all platforms with no adaptation — GetMePost generates separate versions, use that.
What’s next
- First post in GetMePost — if you haven’t started yet.
- How to write LinkedIn posts — patterns that convert.