Guide
Plan Your Week in 15 Minutes with Aria
You don't need hours to keep your brand visible. This guide shows how to use Aria and the scheduler to plan one week of posts in about 15 minutes.
1. Decide how often you actually want to post
Start from something sustainable, not ideal. For most people, 2–3 posts per week is enough to be visible without being overwhelmed. Pick the number that you can reliably stick to.
Once you see that this routine really does fit into your week, you can add more posts later. The point of this guide is to prove that consistency is possible with the time you have.
2. Spend a few minutes on topics
Open Grolynk and look at Aria's suggested topics. Pick 2–3 that feel relevant for this week, or add your own based on what you're working on or talking about with clients.
The goal is not to plan a content calendar for months. It's just to decide: "What are the few things I want to say this week?"
3. Draft your posts quickly with Aria
For each topic, use Aria to create a draft:
- Use Aria Magic for idea → post.
- Use a YouTube URL if the topic ties to a video.
- Use Write if you already have notes or a rough draft.
Don't over-edit at this stage. Focus on making sure each post has one clear idea and sounds like something you'd say out loud. You can tidy details later if needed.
4. Use the scheduler to place each post
Open the scheduler and drop each post into the week. Spread them out so you're not posting everything on the same day. Aria can suggest good times based on your audience; you don't need to guess.
When you're done, you should see your week covered at a glance. From here on, you only need to show up to respond to comments and messages — the posting itself is handled.
5. Keep the routine light and repeatable
This whole flow should take around 15 minutes once you're familiar with it:
- Pick your posting frequency for the week.
- Choose a topic per post (with Aria's help).
- Generate drafts quickly with Aria.
- Schedule each post across the week.
If it ever starts to feel heavy, reduce the number of posts instead of dropping the routine. The habit is more important than the volume.