
The solo founder's system for social media
You don't need a marketing hire to post consistently. You need a system that turns 30 minutes a week into a full content pipeline.
Most founders treat social media as the thing they'll do "when there's time." There's never time. The fix isn't more discipline — it's a system that survives a busy week.
The trap of doing it manually
Manual posting fails predictably: you're consistent for two weeks, a launch or a fire eats your attention, and the account goes quiet for a month. Audiences read silence as "out of business." The goal is a pipeline that keeps running even when you don't touch it.
A 30-minute weekly system
Monday: one prompt Describe the week's theme once — a feature, an offer, a lesson learned. Generate the campaign across every channel.
Review in one sitting Approve the plan in a single pass. Fix what's off, keep the rest.
Let it run Scheduled posts publish at the best times all week. You're done until next Monday.
Batch, don't dribble
The reason "post daily" advice fails founders is that it assumes daily attention. Batching a whole week (or month) in one session means a single block of focus produces weeks of presence. That's the leverage.
Measure, then repeat what worked
At the end of the week, look at what landed — which hook, which channel, which format. Feed that into next week's prompt. Over a few cycles, your content gets sharper without you working harder.
You're not behind — you're unsystematic
Founders who "aren't good at social" almost always just lack a system, not talent. Put the pipeline in place once, and consistency stops depending on motivation.