Make.com Recipe: Auto-Post Your Blog to Social
A Make scenario that watches your RSS feed and drafts polished LinkedIn and X posts for every new article, ready for your approval.
No-Code & AutomationPDF · 5 pages· v1.0
4.2A Make scenario that watches your RSS feed and drafts polished LinkedIn and X posts for every new article, ready for your approval.
No-Code & AutomationPDF · 5 pages· v1.0
4.2Publishing a blog post and then manually rewriting it for social media is a tax on your time. This Make.com (formerly Integromat) recipe automates the boring half: it watches your blog's RSS feed, and the moment a new post appears, it composes a clean social caption, attaches the link, and either schedules it or drops it into a buffer for human approval. The recipe is for content marketers, founders, and creators who already have a blog with an RSS feed and want consistent social distribution without a daily chore. No code required - just a Make account (free tier is fine to start) and the social accounts you want to post to. The guide focuses on the parts people get wrong: how Make's RSS module decides what counts as 'new' so you don't spam old posts, how to truncate and format captions per network (X has a character limit, LinkedIn rewards longer hooks), and how to add a human-in-the-loop approval step so nothing publishes that you haven't seen. After completing it you'll have a hands-off pipeline from 'publish blog post' to 'social drafts ready', saving an hour or more per post and keeping your channels consistently active.
No to start. The free plan covers low-frequency RSS polling, which suits most blogs that publish a few times a week. Higher posting volume or faster polling may need a paid plan.
Only if you want it to. The guide includes an approval step that routes drafts to email or a Make data store for review, so you stay in control. You can remove it for full automation.
Most platforms (WordPress, Ghost, Webflow, Substack) expose RSS automatically at a standard path. The guide lists the common feed URLs so you can find yours.
On first activation Make's RSS module can treat existing items as new. The guide shows how to set the 'where to start' marker to 'from now on' so only future posts trigger it.
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