how to batch your social media content

Education & Strategy

How to Batch a Month of Social Content in One Afternoon

May 5, 2026

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Social media feels a lot less overwhelming when you stop treating it like a daily emergency.

Instead of waking up and thinking, “Oh no, we haven’t posted in six days,” try setting aside 2–5 hours once a month to batch your content.

Nothing fancy. Nothing overly complicated. Just a little structure, a little focus, and maybe a fun drink so it feels less like homework.

Here’s a simple content batching flow we recommend:

Step 1: Spend 30-60 minutes writing captions

Start by writing 8 captions for the month.

That gives you roughly two posts per week, which is a solid starting point for most businesses trying to stay consistent without making social media their full-time job.

A few caption ideas to rotate through:

  • Educational post
  • Behind-the-scenes post
  • Client/customer story
  • Product or service highlight
  • Personal or founder story
  • FAQ post
  • Testimonial or review
  • Call-to-action post

The goal here is not to write the next great American novel. The goal is to get ideas out of your head and into a format you can actually use.

Done is better than “I have 43 half-written notes in my phone.”

Step 2: Spend an hour creating the visuals

Once your captions are written, move into design mode.

For 8 posts, you DON’T need 8 custom-designed graphics. Please release yourself from that pressure.

A simple mix could look like:

5 photos + 3 graphics

That’s it.

Use real photos when you can. Your space, your team, your product, your process, your face. People connect with real life more than overly polished templates.

For the graphics, keep them clean and easy to read.

And because grid aesthetics can become a whole thing – that’s a song for another time – here are three quick rules:

  1. Keep your colors and fonts consistent.
    Your posts don’t have to be identical, but they should feel like they came from the same brand.
  2. Alternate your content types.
    Mix photos, graphics, reels, and text-based posts so your feed doesn’t feel repetitive.
  3. Don’t overstuff the design.
    If someone has to squint, zoom in, or take a deep breath before reading it, simplify it.

Want to add a reel? Great. You don’t always have to film something from scratch. Sites like Pexels and Dupe can be helpful for aesthetic stock video and b-roll when you need simple visual support.

Step 3: Spend 30 minutes scheduling everything

Once your captions and visuals are ready, schedule them.

We use Metricool for scheduling, planning, and analytics, but Instagram and Facebook also have native scheduling tools through Meta Business Suite.

This is the part that makes future-you want to hug current-you.

Instead of manually posting throughout the month, you can load everything in, space it out, and let it run.

You can always adjust later if something timely comes up, but now you have a baseline. You’re not starting from zero every week.

Bonus: Batch a few stories too

If you have extra time, create a few story graphics while you’re already in content mode.

Think:

  • “New blog is live”
  • “Client win”
  • “Behind the scenes”
  • “Reminder to book”
  • “FAQ”
  • “Poll or question box”

Stories are easy to forget in the day-to-day, especially when you’re actually running the business. Having a few ready to go gives you something to post when your brain is fully offline.

The point is consistency, not perfection

Batching content is not about removing all spontaneity from your social media.

It’s about creating a rhythm so your business stays visible even when your week gets busy, your inbox gets wild, or your brain simply says, “no thanks.”

Set aside one afternoon a month. Write the captions. Make the visuals. Schedule the posts.

Your future self will thank you.

And your social media will finally stop feeling like that one task silently judging you from the corner.

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I’m Alexa - your social media strategist & biggest cheerleader!


If you’re new here, welcome! I know how overwhelming it can feel to keep up with social media while running a business. That’s why I’m here - to take the stress off your plate and make sure your online presence truly reflects the incredible work you do.

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