Most creators don’t have a content problem. They have a posting problem. Posting natively across ten networks burns hours, kills consistency, and turns “marketing” into a daily fire drill. PostSyncer fixes that by letting you plan, schedule, and publish from one place across the platforms you actually use.
Social media “consistency” is a tax.
You pay it with your mornings, your focus, and your will to live.
PostSyncer (postsyncer.com) wants that tax gone. The product positions itself as a simple scheduler and manager for people who publish a lot and hate bouncing between tabs.
Here’s the deal: most schedulers stop at the usual suspects. PostSyncer shows up with a wider bench of platforms out of the box.
Today it supports Twitter/X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Pinterest, Threads, Telegram, LinkedIn, Bluesky, and Mastodon. That mix matters if you’re a solo founder repurposing one idea into ten posts, or a small team trying to keep brand pages alive without hiring an agency.
PostSyncer also leans hard into the “one place” workflow.
You connect accounts, queue posts, and keep your publishing plan in one dashboard instead of duct-taping native apps, reminders, and spreadsheets. Less context switching. Fewer missed posts. Fewer “wait, did we ship that?” moments.
The onboarding aims to stay friction-free, with Google sign-in and a “Start For Free” entry point. Good. Scheduling tools fail when they make you work before you get value.
What’s the real win?
You stop treating social posting like a daily chore and start treating it like a batch job. Spend one session building a week (or a month) of content, then let postsyncer.com handle the boring part while you go build product, close deals, or ship updates.
If you run multiple channels, PostSyncer sells one promise: post once, stay present everywhere - without living inside social apps.

