Built lean — a scheduler, a calendar, and a post editor. No analytics, no AI fluff, no upsell pop-ups.
See all your scheduled posts on a clean monthly calendar. Navigate months and see exactly what goes live and when.
Pick a date and time down to the minute. Posts go out automatically — no need to be online.
Attach up to 20 images per post with a drag-and-drop uploader. Preview them inline before publishing.
Posts are published directly via the LinkedIn API. No third-party relay, no extra accounts.
The existing tools are overpriced, over-featured, and over-permissioned. This is the lean alternative you self-host in 10 minutes.
Most scheduling tools charge $15–50/month. This one costs what your server costs — often zero on a free tier.
Fork it, modify it, white-label it. No black-box algorithms deciding when your posts get pushed.
Your LinkedIn tokens, your post content, your schedule — all stored in your own database. Nothing leaves your infra.
Open source means bugs get fixed faster, features get added by real users, and the project outlives any one person.
The codebase is designed to be forked and commercialized. Three steps to a revenue-generating LinkedIn scheduling SaaS:
Swap the single-user session for team accounts. Each user connects their own LinkedIn.
Add a payment wall — free tier for 5 posts/month, paid tier for unlimited. Drop in Stripe Checkout in an afternoon.
Push to Vercel + Railway (or your own VPS). Set your price. Keep 100% of revenue minus Stripe fees.
The economics work.
Hosting on Railway/Render runs ~$5–10/month. Charge 20 users $5/month = $100/month profit with zero feature work. A lean micro SaaS that runs itself.
Plan a week of LinkedIn content in one sitting. Let the scheduler handle the rest.
Maintain a consistent LinkedIn presence without hiring a social media manager.
Build your personal brand on LinkedIn while you focus on shipping. Set it and forget it.
Fork the repo, wrap it in payments, and sell it as a niche scheduling SaaS.