Social Content Calendar Generator
Turn a posting cadence into a real, dated schedule. Choose your start date, how many posts a week and which platforms — then fill in the ideas and export the whole thing to CSV.
| Date | Day | Platform | Post idea |
|---|
Batching is the secret most consistent creators share
The people who post reliably for years rarely do it by sitting down each morning wondering what to say. They batch: a calendar like this one lays out every slot for the next month, and then a single focused session fills a dozen of them at once. Working this way is faster because you stay in one mode instead of switching between strategist and writer all day, and it's more resilient because a busy week doesn't knock you off the air — the posts are already written. The calendar's real job isn't to nag you into posting daily; it's to make the work plannable so it actually gets done.
Plan the mix, not just the dates
An empty calendar tempts you to fill every slot with the same kind of post — usually whatever's easiest, which is often promotion. Resist that and plan a deliberate mix: educational posts that teach something, stories that build connection, and a smaller share of direct promotion. A common rule of thumb is to give most of your slots to value and only a fraction to selling, on the logic that an audience you've genuinely helped is far more receptive when you do ask for the sale. Use the idea column to label each slot by type before you write, and the balance takes care of itself.
LazyPosts.ai
Don't just write one post — stay consistent. LazyPosts plans, writes, and schedules a month of social content on autopilot.
Frequently asked questions
How often should I post on social media?
Consistency beats volume. A sustainable cadence you can keep for months — say three to five posts a week per platform — almost always outperforms a burst of daily posts that burns you out in a fortnight. Pick a frequency you can realistically maintain and let the calendar hold you to it.
What's the point of a content calendar?
A calendar turns 'I should post more' into specific slots you can plan and batch against. It prevents last-minute scrambling, makes it obvious when you've gone quiet, and lets you balance content types across the week instead of posting whatever happens to be top of mind that day.
Can I import this into a scheduling tool?
Yes. Export the schedule as CSV and you can open it in a spreadsheet to flesh out captions, then map the columns into most social schedulers, or keep it as your planning source of truth. The CSV includes the date, platform and a blank slot for your post idea.