
Table of Contents
- Social Media Management Definition
- Why It Matters
- Tools and Software Comparison
- Social Media Marketing Process
- Workflow Implementation With CoSchedule
What is Social Media Management, Exactly?
You could be here looking for a few different things:- A process for managing social media marketing. What does the 10,000-foot view look like?
- Software for executing that process. There are tons of tools available. Which ones are best?
- The actual work of managing multiple networks at once. What are the daily, weekly, and quarterly tasks a social media manager is responsible for?
Why is Organizing Your Social Media Management Important?
Organized marketing teams are 397% more likely to report success. That’s a staggering statistic, and it’s based on data gathered in a recent CoSchedule study. The implications for your social media marketing are clear: getting organized helps build a clear path to success. Putting processes and workflows into place might not be the fun or interesting part of doing the work, but it’s important for supporting the success of everything else you do. Call us biased (because we are, in fact, biased), but the best way to get organized is with CoSchedule’s Social Organizer. It’s a complete solution for managing your social media marketing, from start to finish.
Choosing Social Media Management Tools That Work for You
There’s no way to manage multiple accounts, workflows, scheduling, and measurement without the right apps and services to get it all done. And as a quick Google search will show, you have no end of options in this space. So, which features and functionality do you need in your toolbox? Consider the following options:- Social Organizer from CoSchedule: Complete suite for organizing social media marketing.
- Meet Edgar: Offers social automation to keep accounts full of content.
- Hootsuite: Popular long-running social scheduling platform.
- Sprout Social: Robust social media platform with deep analytics features.
- Hubspot: Complete marketing platform that includes social media scheduling capacities. Integrates with CoSchedule.
- Hey Orca: Social scheduling and approval workflow tool.
- Agora Pulse: Social media scheduling and management platform.
- Buffer: Cost-effective social scheduling that integrates with CoSchedule.
- Everypost: Social scheduling and curation.
- Social Pilot: Offers social scheduling and analytics functionality.
- Social Oomph: Social and blog post scheduling tool.
- Falcon.io: Enterprise social platform.
- Supported Networks
- Price (Billed Monthly)
- Mobile App Availability
- Direct Video Upload Capability
- “Best Time” Automation
- Automated Resharing
- Reports/Analytics
- Content Curation Features
- Collaboration and Project Management Features
Which Tool Has Every Feature?
Here's a quick comparison chart for reference:
How Many Social Media Channels Can You Connect?
Each social media scheduling tool allows certain social media channels to connect with to them. Depending on which channels your team uses will determine the tools that are available to you:
How Much Does Each Tool Cost?
After figuring out which social channels you want to connect to your social media scheduling tool the next step is picking a total that is in the budget range of your marketing team.
Is There A Mobile App?
Another addition you may need is a mobile app. Why is a mobile app essential? Consider whether your team needs on-the-go access to your social content. If there's an issue with a post or something that needs to be changed, your team can make the necessary corrections easily, even when they're away from the office. It also makes it easier to create spontaneous posts while you're out and about.
Automatically Post at the Best Time, Every Time
Social media posts should be scheduled when your audience is most active. Why does this matter? Because if you want the most people to see your content, you need to share it when they're online. Tools that can automate scheduling for you (like CoSchedule's Best Time Scheduling) are immense time-savers in this area:
Upload Your Videos Directly To Social Networks
Videos are an integral part of your social media presence. In fact, videos on Facebook receive 135% more engagement than photos. Plus, directly uploading video to the platform has been shown to be more effective than sharing links from other video platforms, like YouTube.
Can You Reshare Old Posts Automatically?
Evergreen content is an excellent way to help fill the gaps in your calendar and maintain a consistent posting schedule. The great thing about reusing your evergreen content is it doesn’t need to be updated; it can just keep going. CoSchedule has its own intelligent re-scheduling tool called ReQueue. It allows your social media team to strategically choose your best performing content and fill the gaps in your calendar.
Measure Performance With Powerful Analytics
Proving what your team is doing on social media can be incredibly time-consuming. Having to go through in-app data channels can take forever and when your team is already crunched for a time, losing a day can make or break a project deadline. To save your team time, look for social media scheduling tools that have analytics and report features built into them.
Use Content Curation Features to Keep Your Calendar Full of Posts
Curating great content from reputable sources is a great way to keep your social media calendar full. But, how you do easily and effectively share content on a consistent basis? Start by selecting a tool with curation features built-in:

Get Organized With Collaboration And Project Management Features
Lastly, let's look at collaboration and project management features. Why would this be important to a scheduling tool? The complete social media campaign planning and content creation process often crosses over multiple teams. Instead of collaborating over email, keeping communication organized in one tool helps ensure messages don't get lost.
Recommended Reading: The Complete 16-Step Marketing Project Management Process That Will Get You Organized
What Does a High-Level Social Media Management Process Look Like?
How do any of these tools actually get put to use? From beginning to end, what does this process look like (for companies that even have a clear process in place)? Precise answers to those questions would differ between specific organizations. But, here is a general overview of how social media marketing gets managed at a high level.Daily Tasks
There are some things you should do every day if you want your social media efforts to be successful:- Engage with your followers: By this, I mean that you should reply to followers, respond to mentions and blog comments, and in general, show signs of life on your social media accounts. CoSchedule's Social Conversations Inbox is a great tool for this.
- Instigate engagement: Find influencers to engage with on social media. Follow or somehow connect with someone new.
- Share the latest interesting content: Look through your social media feeds, and share any interesting and worthwhile content you see in it. Share a link to your own content if it fits with what you’re seeing in your news feed. This is an easy way to capitalize on what’s popular, trending, or new right now. Spend time in your news feed and count it as part of your overall social media curation plan.

Weekly Tasks
Many content marketers will give you a long list of things to do every day when it comes to social media management. You may be able to pull it off down the road when you’ve established your own habits and rhythm. I’m going to suggest that, when starting out, you set some of those activities as weekly activities so you don’t feel overwhelmed and give up. So, choose a different day of the week for each of the following:- Trends and keywords: Look for trends and keywords that are popular in your social media feeds and plan content (or curation) that will use them. Monitor topics and words that matter for your niche. For fast-moving networks like Twitter, a weekly approach won’t really work all that well. But for other networks (e.g. Pinterest), it will. Start weekly. You can do this daily eventually, as you get more adept with it. BuzzSumo is a great tool for this purpose.
- Brand monitoring: Do a search on your name, your blog’s name, or your brand’s name on social networks. Is there anything you need to respond to or be aware of? Do the same for your competitors or others in your niche. Find out what people are saying and how you can tap into it for your benefit.
- Find content to curate: Remember how important curation is? Find outside content to share with your followers and add it to your CoSchedule calendar for the upcoming week. You can always add interesting new content to your curation schedule that you stumble on during the week. Set aside time to schedule it so you know you are curating well.
- Schedule your own content on social media: Set aside a day or two where you will block out some time to simply schedule your own content to publish on social media. Part of this should include sharing your older, evergreen content that performed well, as well as any other content you want to bring back in front of your social audience.
- Monday: Schedule social posts for the new content you’ll be creating this week.
- Tuesday: Schedule social posts from your older, evergreen content, at least two a day for each network. Add to your calendar for the next seven days.
- Wednesday: Find content to curate and add to your schedule for the next seven days.
- Thursday: Look up keywords and find trends. Does your current publishing calendar fit with these?

Monthly Tasks
Every month, you should be:- Checking your data and analytics. Do this at the start of the month. Check your stats and analytics to see how well your social content is performing. Look for trends in traffic, topics, networks, time and date shared, and type of content shared. Discover what's working and what isn’t. For a beginner, put this on a monthly basis. As you get better at social media management and find you can handle the extra load, I’d recommend moving it to a weekly basis.
- Adjust any paid advertisement. If you’re running ads on social media networks, you’ll want to review their performance each month. Paid advertisement is definitely not “set it and forget it”.
- Adjust your goals. Set (and change) your social media goals according to what your monthly analytics review is telling you. Maybe you need to be sharing more (or less), or at a different time. Create A/B tests to run the next month that you can use for better decision making the next round.
- Plan your content. Plan your upcoming monthly content marketing in regards to social media. Think of the blog content you’ll be creating, any campaigns or themes, and plan and create that content that you’ll be publishing. Get it on the calendar.
Implementing a 5-Step Management Process for Social Media Marketing
The previous section outlined a number of tasks and responsibilities you could hypothetically distribute across your daily, weekly, and monthly schedule. Of course, they aren’t necessarily everything every team will need to take on, but having such an outline can be helpful for getting an understanding of how you might divide your work. But, what’s missing is how to actually implement consistent management processes for social media. So, here’s how to actually do the work, step by step.Step 1: Planning + Organization With a Social Media Calendar
You’ve probably heard some variation of the Benjamin Franklin quote, “By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.” It’s a cliched phrase, sure, but it’s one that holds true. So, before diving into the nuts and bolts of managing social, you need to set up your tools in a way that supports smart processes. Doing this now helps prevent problems later.Connecting Accounts
First, connect your social accounts to CoSchedule (or other social software of your choosing; again, you have plenty of options). The platform supports:- Tumblr
Onboarding Team Members
Adopting new software often goes off the rails when team members refuse to use it. This is often due to one of the following reasons:- Fear of change.
- Skepticism about the value of adding new software.
- Attachment to old ways of doing things.
Recommended Reading: The 3-Step Change Management Process That Will Boost Your Career
Using a DAM to Make Commonly Used Files Easily Accessible
Digital asset management tools make it easy to organize and locate files (like images, photos, and logos). Things you’ll use frequently should be uploaded into some sort of DAM product (or, if you don’t have one, cloud storage like Google Drive, Onedrive, Dropbox, or something similar). DAMs have the advantage of being purpose-built for this work (rather than being generalist tools like the other options listed above). Some popular DAMs include: CoSchedule customers can also use the Asset Organizer that’s built into the platform. It offers the kind of DAM functionality marketing teams will need most, so the things you need to use and collaborate on for social campaigns are always easily accessible.
- Use a consistent file naming convention. Frame.io has a great guide on doing this.
- Agree upon what does (and does not) go into the DAM. Just so everyone knows the correct place to look for particular types of assets.
- Give access to everyone who needs it. Otherwise there’s little reason to have a shared repository for your important files.
Color-Coding + Tagging Your Calendar
Ideally, your platform of choice will also include calendar functionality, with the ability to add color-coding to easily visualize posts, campaigns, and other projects. Since social media doesn’t (or shouldn’t) exist in a vacuum, being able to manage social projects alongside other work amongst your marketing team is best.
- Color-coding by campaign: This can help separate them at a glance.
- Color-coding by team: This can help everyone know who’s working on what.
- Color-coding by project status: This can help identify project or campaign progress.

- By campaign: Green for Educational content, Blue for Product content, etc.
- By team: Blue for Social Team, Green for Content Team, Red for PR Team, etc.
- By status: Red for Backlog, Yellow for In Progress, Green for Published, etc.

- Filtering by topic. Social campaigns organized by popular topics with your audience.
- Filtering by product categories. Social campaigns around certain products.
- Filtering by team. Social campaigns organized around the team that created them.

Recommended Reading: How to Create Efficient Social Media Workflows for Every Network
Step 2: Collaborating on Effective Social Media Workflows
Once everything is set up and ready to go software-wise, it’s time to start putting it into practice. From planning and executing campaigns to scheduling one-off posts to reviewing and approving all your social media content, there needs to be a plan in place to get it all done consistently. This entails managing several different components:- Ideation meetings. Brainstorming around future campaigns.
- Client meetings. If you’re an agency or consultant.
- Setting up workflows. Putting process management steps into place.
- Managing project approvals. Keeping review steps clear improves efficiency and accuracy.
- Meeting deadlines. Your posts and campaigns need to get published on time, every time.
Managing Meetings
Keeping these things in line is easier when you have one place to manage them. A platform with a Google Calendar integration makes this clean and simple (so all your work and meetings can be viewed in one location).Step 3: Creating + Scheduling + Publishing Every Social Post
With processes in place for managing the work, how does the work itself actually get done? Here’s an overview of what needs to be managed well to succeed.Put a Campaign Planning Process into Place
Are you creating posts without a clear plan or strategy right now? Or just sharing what you have on the fly? Neither of these scenarios is ideal. In fact, neither is any way to actually do quality work. Ideally, the bulk of your posts will be strategically planned around campaigns. Some basic examples include:- A series of posts promoting a particular piece of content. Creating blog posts, case studies, ebooks, white papers, or other content? You should be promoting it on social media.
- Event promotion. This is particularly important on Facebook, where event promotion does particularly well.
- Sales campaigns. Think holiday campaigns or content supporting seasonal sales cycles.

Recommended Reading: How to Crush Social Media Campaign Planning
Establish a Strategic Posting Schedule
There’s no such thing as a universally perfect posting schedule. But, you need to have some sort of schedule in place to keep the consistency required to build and engage an audience (oh, and it helps to post when your audience is active, too). If you need some starting points to work with, here’s a basic post frequency to consider:
Recommended Reading: The Best Social Media Posting Schedule That Will Boost Your Success By 192%
Follow a Consistent Content Creation Workflow
Here’s a basic workflow you can borrow and adapt to fit your needs and available resources:
- Source internal content (images, links, etc.)
- Apply social sharing template
- Write post copy
- Add images
- Approve content
- Add posts to ReQueue to be re-shared
- Monitor engagement and reactions
- Report on performance
- Source internal content (images, links, etc.) - (Social Media Specialist)
- Apply social sharing template - (Social Media Specialist)
- Write post copy - (Copywriter)
- Add images - (Graphic Designer)
- Approve content - (Marketing Manager)
- Add posts to ReQueue to be reshared - (Social Media Specialist)
- Monitor engagement and reactions - (Social Media Specialist)
- Report on performance - (Analyst)
- Source internal content (images, links, etc.) - (Social Media Specialist) - 3 hours
- Apply social sharing template - (Social Media Specialist) - 5 minutes
- Write post copy - (Copywriter) - 4 hours
- Add images - (Graphic Designer) - 4 hours
- Approve content - (Marketing Manager) - 30 minutes
- Add posts to ReQueue to be reshared - (Social Media Specialist) - 15 minutes
- Monitor engagement and reactions - (Social Media Specialist) - 1 to 2 weeks
- Report on performance - (Analyst) - 2 hours

- Based on when the project publishes: Timelines and due dates will be based on when posts in the campaign actually start going live (this is the default option in CoSchedule).
- Based on when the project begins: Timelines and due dates will be based on when the team starts working on the campaign.


Recommended Reading: How to Boost a Marketing Workflow Process That Will Reduce Work By 30-50%
Setting Up Approval Processes
Now, how do you make sure work is completed correctly before it goes live? Start by setting up an approval process using Approval Workflows in CoSchedule. Click into a Task:


Schedule Posts and Campaigns on a Marketing Calendar
Once your campaigns are planned and checklists are in place, it’s time to set up and schedule your social content on your calendar. This is done differently when using different tools (obviously, because they don’t all work the same, even if they do similar things). If you’re using CoSchedule, you can:- Schedule individual posts. For spontaneous posts or one-off sharing.
- Schedule complete campaigns. Useful for setting up coordinated campaigns all at once.
- Schedule campaigns attached to your WordPress content. This makes it easy to schedule not only blog posts, but their social media promotion in one place.




Recommended Reading: Social Media Content Calendar: How to Organize a Year of Posts the Easy Way
Reshare Your Best-Performing Content
Some tools (like CoSchedule, Buffer, and MeetEdgar) offer the ability to automate resharing your best-performing posts (or really any posts you’d like to share multiple times, but ideally that means your best stuff). CoSchedule’s ReQueue makes managing this easy. This quick video explains exactly how it works:
Recommended Reading: 52 Effective Social Media Post Ideas and Examples to Fill Your Calendar
Step 4: Monitoring Engagement
Once your content is out in the wild, it’s going to start driving engagement. Maybe not a ton at first. Perhaps not even for a while (depending on how effective your strategy might be). But it’s going to drive results, and if you’re doing sound planning, managing things well, and (of course) creating content your customers want, it’ll be an asset for your business. In order to prove that value though, you need to have engagement monitoring and measurement processes in place.Who’s Responding to Your Mentions?
Who’s responsible for monitoring your social media mentions? The social media team? PR? Customer service? The answer could be any combination of the roles listed above. What matters more than who specifically owns this task, is ensuring that the right people are responding to the right messages at the right time. Most social platforms include some form of monitoring social conversations. CoSchedule customers can use the Social Conversations Inbox (for Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram) to track incoming messages and respond to their audiences:
Recommended Reading: The Best Social Media Report Template to Show Your Results
How Do You Manage Responding to Mentions on Social Media?
No matter who is responsible for managing and responding to engagement on your social media channels, they’ll need some protocols to follow in different situations they might run into. Some tips that can help here include:- Provide canned messaging for common questions. This can save tons of time. Swat.io has put together some templates you can get started with.
- Keep your social media passwords secure. This helps ensure only the right people can access them (potentially preventing catastrophe by itself). 1Password, Dashlane, LastPass, and KeePass are password locker options to consider.
- Develop a simple social media crisis scale. How can your team know the difference between a troll, a genuine complaint, and a full-on crisis? Follow this simple visual guide:

Recommended Reading: How to Manage a Social Media Crisis Without Losing Your Mind
Step 5: Measuring and Reporting on Post-Level Performance
There’s an old saying from Peter Drucker, “What gets measured, gets managed.” What did he mean by that, exactly? The things that you pay attention to, that move the needle most for your business, are the things you’re going to spend time measuring. And the things you measure should be the things that matter most for your business. When analytics tools give you the ability to measure everything, it can be easy to get distracted from the metrics that actually tell the most accurate story about how your social media marketing is performing. Here’s a quick visual guide to matching social media metrics with business objectives:
Recommended Reading: How to Use Social Media Analytics to Create the Best Content
Gathering Your Data + Reporting on Performance
So, what you measure depends on what matters to you. But, no matter what you measure, you’ll need software to get the job done. Once again, most social media tools that allow you to create and schedule posts, will also include some degree of measurement or analytics functionality. CoSchedule offers a robust array of social analytics and reports, both for your social media marketing efforts as a whole, and for each network you have connected to your account.
- Campaign
- Network
- Overall Engagement
- Engagement Rate
- Total Engagements
- Posts Published (Messages Sent)
- Top Post Type
- Engagement Growth
- Network-Level Engagement
- Top-Performing Posts
- Best-performing days, times, and post types.
- Post Impressions
- Posts reshared with ReQueue

Start Managing Social Media Marketing With CoSchedule’s Social Organizer
Now you’ve got a (very) high-level look into social media management and the multiple moving parts that make it all work. Plus, you know that while you have plenty of options for software to support getting the work done, CoSchedule’s Social Organizer brings everything together as part of a suite of products that help you publish more work, hit all your deadlines, and keep it all organized. Whichever software you choose though, here’s to your future success.
The post Social Media Management: The Complete Guide to Getting It Right appeared first on CoSchedule Blog.