

So Tweetdeck isn’t used as much around here now… although we did love it for the ability to RT good stuff from whichever account you want to use.

Although the browser version is better (just head to ) it’s still very glitchy and not as smooth as anything I’ve used on Mac before. The load bearing on Mac from the app is hideous and the beachball of death is always spinning when Tweetdeck is running despite a beefed up RAM. I’m a Mac user and on Mac it’s… well… it’s bloody awful.
Tweetdeck teams not working full#
It breaks and it’s full of bugs and it’s not really moved on since 2011 either. Twitter bought Tweetdeck in 2011 for £25M and since then it’s not been very well. Tweetdeck is so simple to use and bespoke to your needs it’s always been a go-to tool… Do I use it to schedule my content now? No. You can schedule as many as you like (to my knowledge) and it works just fine. You simply create a tweet and hit ‘schedule tweet’ instead of ‘tweet’ and you’re given a simple calendar to select your time and date. Scheduling tweets on Tweetdeck is really simple. I like to keep saved searches, favourite hashtags, mentions, messages, and GPS location tweets of keywords. The great thing about Tweetdeck is the ability to set your dashboard how you need it. One of the greatest things about Tweetdeck is the simplicity to add in new columns for just about anything in Twitter
Tweetdeck teams not working serial#
It’s the perfect platform for the serial list builder and email folder lover of the world. Tweetdeck’s display is set in columns that you set and organise. It also allows you to have many accounts on your dashboard at once, and as a social media manager this appeals to me. Tweetdeck allows you to interact with Twitter and schedule at the same time.

It was created by a third party (not Twitter) and was one of the first tools I used to automate tweets. There are three main players in the Twitter scheduling arena and they are Buffer, Tweetdeck and Hootsuite.īuffer, Tweetdeck or Hootsuite? What’s the Best Scheduling Tool for Twitter? Tweetdeck It’s hard to answer this without being biased, but I’ll try to. I do use a scheduling tool and I’m always asked which one I use and which one is the best. Automation gives you the chance to be around when you don’t have time – but it shouldn’t be a 100% substitute for you. Having a digital skeleton of tweets really helps to keep your content flowing and it really does boost traffic to your website.īut (and it’s a big but) you can’t just automate… you have to turn up too. Say what you like about Twitter scheduling tools – they work.Īs long as you’re there for replies and as long as you go live and join in the conversation, they’re well worth using.
