The Metricool planner is the interface most users spend the most time in, and it’s better designed than it looks on first use. A few things about how it works are non-obvious — understanding them makes scheduling significantly faster and the calendar significantly more useful.
The Calendar View
The planner defaults to a weekly view — seven days, time slots from morning to evening, posts displayed as blocks on the calendar at their scheduled times. Each post block shows the platform icons for the platforms it’s going to and a preview of the content.
Switch to monthly view for a higher-level content calendar perspective — useful for checking coverage across a month, identifying gaps in posting cadence, and reviewing the distribution of content across platforms. Monthly view is where you plan; weekly view is where you execute.
The planner is per-brand — use the brand switcher at the top to move between brand calendars. There’s no cross-brand calendar view, which is the one piece of the planner that agencies managing many brands wish existed. You have to switch brands to see each brand’s calendar separately.
Best Time Recommendations
The highlighted time slots on the planner calendar are Metricool’s best-time recommendations — calculated from your account’s historical engagement data to show when your specific audience is most active. These are not generic industry benchmarks; they’re account-specific calculations based on when posts have performed well for your audience in the past.
Use the recommended slots, especially in the first months before you have enough intuition about your audience’s behavior. Check the analytics monthly to see whether the recommendations are confirmed by actual performance data. Most of the time they’re accurate; occasionally a specific account’s audience skews differently than the algorithm expects, in which case you’ll see it in the engagement data and can adjust.
Creating Posts Efficiently
The fastest posting workflow in Metricool: click a recommended time slot on the calendar → the post creation interface opens with the time pre-filled → write the caption → click the Canva button to create or import the visual → select the platforms → confirm and schedule. The whole workflow for a simple single-platform post with an existing visual takes under two minutes once it’s familiar.
For cross-platform posts — the same caption going to multiple platforms — select all target platforms in the post creation interface. Metricool will show you a preview of how the post renders on each platform, which is useful for catching formatting issues (caption length limits, image aspect ratio differences) before the post is scheduled. You can also customize the caption per platform within the same post creation flow if the content needs to be adapted.
The Drafts View
Posts can be saved as drafts rather than scheduled — useful for content that’s written but not yet ready to assign a date, or for posts created via API that are waiting for review before being confirmed for scheduling. Access drafts from the planner’s draft view. Review drafts, assign dates and times, and move them to scheduled status from this view.
The draft workflow is how we handle API-created posts in our operation — the pipeline creates posts as drafts in Metricool, which appear in the drafts view for review and scheduling confirmation. This lets the pipeline create the content while a human confirms the scheduling before anything actually publishes.
Bulk Scheduling
For operations scheduling a large volume of content, Metricool’s bulk scheduling feature allows you to upload a CSV file with post content, media URLs, platforms, and scheduled times — creating multiple scheduled posts in one import rather than one post at a time through the interface. This is the alternative to the API for batch scheduling workflows that don’t require real-time programmatic access.
The CSV format requirements are documented in Metricool’s help center. Build your content calendar in a spreadsheet, export to CSV, and import to Metricool for the week or month. The bulk import creates all posts in the planner simultaneously, which is significantly faster than manual post-by-post creation for high-volume operations.
We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.
Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you reschedule posts by dragging them on the Metricool planner?
Yes — posts on the planner calendar can be dragged to a different time slot to reschedule them. This is one of the more convenient aspects of the visual planner interface — rescheduling is a drag-and-drop action rather than opening each post and manually changing the time.
What happens if a scheduled post fails to publish?
Metricool sends a notification when a post fails to publish. Common causes are expired social account connections (the OAuth token needs to be re-authorized), platform API errors (usually temporary and resolved by rescheduling), or content policy violations (the platform rejected the content). Check the notification for the specific failure reason and reauthorize the connection or reschedule the post as needed.
Can you see all brands’ posts in one planner view?
No — the Metricool planner is per-brand. You see one brand’s calendar at a time and switch brands using the brand switcher. For agencies managing many brands who want a cross-brand content calendar view, this is a genuine limitation of the current planner. External calendar tools connected via API are the workaround for operations that need that visibility, but it requires building the integration.
Does Metricool support content approval before posts go live?
Basic approval workflows are available on higher plan tiers — team members can create posts that go into a review queue rather than scheduling directly, with another team member or manager approving before the post schedules. The approval workflow is simpler than enterprise tools like Hootsuite or Sprout Social, but adequate for small teams with basic review requirements.