Dohoo’s scheduling feature lets you plan your entire content calendar in advance. Create posts, set an exact date and time, and Dohoo automatically publishes them to your chosen platforms — no manual intervention required. Whether you’re managing a single personal account or dozens of client profiles, scheduling keeps your presence consistent without demanding you be online around the clock.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.dohoo.ai/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Supported platforms
You can schedule posts to any combination of the following platforms from a single workflow:TikTok
YouTube
Twitter / X
Threads
How to schedule a post
Select a file from your media library
Open the Media Library, find the video or image you want to post, and click Post.
Choose target platforms
Toggle on every platform you want to publish to. You can select one or as many as all eight.
Add your caption, hashtags, and description
Write your caption or description in the text field. Add hashtags, mentions, and any platform-specific copy. You can customize the caption separately for each platform if needed.
Set the publish date and time
Click the** **date picker, choose the date and time, and confirm click Schedule.
Scheduled post quota by plan
Each plan supports a maximum number of posts waiting in your scheduled queue at the same time. Once a scheduled post publishes, that slot opens up for a new one.| Plan | Scheduled posts |
|---|---|
| Blogger | 90 |
| Business | 250 |
| Agency | 550 |
Publications are unlimited on all plans. The quota applies to how many posts can be in your scheduled queue simultaneously, not to the total number of posts you publish over time.
Platform-specific format requirements
Each platform has its own rules around video dimensions, aspect ratios, maximum duration, and caption character limits.Review each platform’s format requirements before scheduling. Dohoo adapts content where possible, but some platforms will reject posts that fall outside their specifications — for example, a video that exceeds YouTube’s maximum file size or a caption that exceeds Twitter/X’s character limit.