Social creator workflow
Creators who post consistently do not reinvent every caption from scratch — they follow a pipeline that moves from idea to published post in predictable steps. This workflow covers short-form social (Instagram, LinkedIn, X) and YouTube packaging, using SlashGit's creator tools to draft copy you still edit in your own voice. The goal is speed without sounding generic.
Step 1: Define the hook and platform
Before opening any tool, write one sentence: what is this post about and who should care? Pick the primary platform — LinkedIn favors story-led openings, Instagram rewards the first line before "see more," YouTube needs a click-worthy title separate from the video description. One piece of content can adapt across platforms, but the hook changes each time.
Keep a running list of content pillars (tutorials, behind-the-scenes, opinions, case studies). Every post should map to one pillar so your feed stays coherent instead of random.
Step 2: Draft the caption
Open the Caption Generator and paste your topic, tone (educational, casual, bold), and any keywords you want included. Treat the output as a first draft — cut filler phrases, add a specific number or anecdote, and end with one clear call to action (comment, save, link in bio).
For professional audiences, run a second pass through the LinkedIn Post generator with the same core idea. LinkedIn performs better with short paragraphs and a question in the final line. Never cross-post identical text; platforms penalize duplicate content and your audiences expect different formats.
Step 3: Research hashtags deliberately
Hashtag spam hurts reach. Use the Hashtag Generator to brainstorm clusters, then manually curate five to twelve tags: two broad (high volume), four niche (your actual community), and one branded if you have one. On Instagram, place hashtags in the first comment if you prefer a clean caption; on LinkedIn, use zero to three topical tags maximum.
Review tags monthly — banned or shadowbanned hashtags change without notice. If reach drops suddenly, swap the set before blaming the algorithm for everything.
Step 4: Refresh your bio across platforms
Your bio is a landing page with 150 characters. Quarterly, update it in the Bio Generator to reflect your current offer: newsletter, course, agency, or channel theme. Include who you help, what outcome you deliver, and one link destination. Match the bio to your pinned post or featured content so new visitors see a consistent message.
Step 5: Package YouTube uploads
Video discovery starts before someone presses play. Brainstorm five title variants in the YouTube Title tool — prioritize curiosity and specificity over vague inspiration. Pick the title that promises a concrete result ("Cut API debug time in half") rather than a mood ("My dev journey").
Thumbnail text must be readable on a phone at arm's length. The Thumbnail Text tool suggests short, high-contrast phrases of three to five words. Design the thumbnail image separately; the text should complement the title, not repeat it word for word.
Step 6: Batch and schedule
Block one session per week: generate drafts for all tools above, edit in a single doc, then schedule via your preferred app. Batching reduces context switching and keeps visual style consistent when you create carousels or short clips from the same source material.
Track what worked — saves and shares matter more than raw likes. Double down on pillars that earn saves; retire hooks that get impressions but no engagement. This creator kit — Caption Generator, Hashtag Generator, Bio Generator, YouTube Title, and Thumbnail Text — stays useful only if you edit outputs into something only you could have written.