Skip to main content

5 Best Social Media Planners for Hassle-Free Handling

 The list mentioned below is the social media planner/scheduler as well as the audit/analysis tool that we use for managing various social media platforms and why I find them better than other tools.

Image for post
5 Best Social Media Planners

1. Hootsuite — It is the best tool for managing Social Media Posts and saving time on social media. By using Hootsuite we can manage all our social profiles from a single dashboard. Publish and schedule posts, engage followers, monitor relevant conversations, measure (and improve!) results, and more. In my opinion, Hootsuite is the best ever social media management tool I’ve ever used. It is also recommended by some of the best digital marketing gurus like Neil Patel.

2. Fan Page Karma — Fanpage Karma includes every feature we need for professional social media management: analyzing, publishing, communicating, researching, and presenting. Everything in one tool. I haven’t used the paid version of fan page karma. But it is praised among all social media strategists.

3. Tweetdeck — It is a free tool for managing twitter posts and scheduling. I’ve personally used TweetDeck for so many days and I’m still using it. It can let you track a single hashtag in a column. You can add multiple columns for multiple hashtags and it can show you all the posts as they’ve been published. It also has a column for trending hashtags worldwide which we can customize according to our requirements.

4. Buffer — Buffer is another social media post management tool with one click. It also has an inbuilt free image editor tool — Pablo. It comes with an inbuilt URL shortener. But It doesn’t include postings for Instagram- which is a very important social network nowadays. We can’t track hashtags, searches, mentions, etc.

5. SproutSocial — It is a very well organized social media management tool. It lacks a very important feature of tracking country-wise mentions. It also compresses the images and posts of low-quality images. It is a bit more expensive.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The changing role of the Designer - Practical Human Centred Design

Source- uxdesign.cc My professor often used to say “An artist designs for himself but a designer designs for others.” I didn’t quite understand that statement until I came across the concept of Human-centred design. Now you might think, wait a minute I have heard of design thinking but what is Human-centred Design? Evolving human needs in our dynamic environment cannot be satisfied with old products or offerings. New products, services, and experiences need to be created regularly to bring value to the user and a perceivable change for the better. Human-centered design is a creative approach to problem-solving and is the backbone of innovation. It’s a process that starts with the problem recognition of people you’re designing for and ends with solutions that fulfill their needs. Human-centered design is all about understanding, being aware of, and being sensitive to the feelings, thoughts, and experiences of the people you’re designing for, basically putting yourself in their shoes. It...

Best Prototyping Tools For UX-UI Designers

Source: pixabay.com " When it comes to innovation, the business has much to learn from design. The philosophy in design shops is, 'try it, prototype it, and improve it ." By Roger Martin What is prototyping?   A prototype is a high fidelity representation of the ultimate app. In fact, it mimics almost the exact user experience/UX as the real interactive app. It allows the stakeholders to extensively test and introduce new ideas if required since they are dealing with a working model with features like hyperlinks and even clickable buttons. The great thing about prototyping is that we can easily identify and predict design and usability problems without even writing a single line of code!  Choosing the right tool:       There's an array of free and paid prototyping tools available in the market. Selection should be based on factors like: What does the client want? Does it allow collaboration with other fellow designers in the team? Is it affordable? The...

How to glide the job market as a newbie UX designer?

  After hearing this topic a question pops up in your mind what exactly the term means, so user experience (UX) basically comes in the action when a customer demands any products after the requirements of a product are given and a design is created that is meaningful and relevant to the user.  This involves the design of the entire process of acquiring and integrating the product, including aspects of branding, design , usability, and function. When you are new to this field you may get worried about its roles and Many questions arise in your mind iso let's look into them-   H ow to land your job in this particular field? So it is advised to make your portfolio Standout which is impressive with its uniqueness not like ordinary projects because many students use the same prompt which looks exactly the same for all the projects so try to build a unique design prompt that seems to have interesting problems and also helps you to get into the direction in which you want to ...