How it Works

All My Hashtags was designed with simplicity in mind. We don’t help you create social media posts, nor schedule them. We’re strictly focused on helping you manage your hashtags as you work to produce the best content possible and spread your reach to even more followers.

Why All My Hashtags?

All My Hashtags was born out of frustration. Like many of you, we got tired of having batches of hashtags stored all throughout our notes, without a real plan for organizing them. What’s more, with Instagram’s guidelines that you should change up your hashtags from time to time, we wanted an easy way to pull random hashtags that we’d already vetted and add them to posts. So that’s what you get with #AMH!

Profiles

You can set up a different number of profiles based on which plan you use. For the purposes of this guide, we’ll use the Premium plan.

The Premium plan comes with three profiles. You can name these profiles anything you want that will help you remember which profile is which. In this example, imagine that you manage three different Instagram accounts for various clients — one that is lifestyle-related, one for a local coffee shop, and one for a travel influencer.

You can name these profiles: [Client] Marissa, [Client] Amy, [Client] Brielle, or anything else you want.

Some #AMH users name their profiles based on the social media account. For example Instagram and Pinterest. If you have an active presence on both, it’s very likely that you’ll use different hashtag keywords for each to reach the most targeted audience.

Categories

Within each profile, you can set up a number of different categories. The Premium plan gives you 15 categories under each profile. Let’s say you’re working on [Client] Marissa’s account. She’s the lifestyle account so you have a number of different categories related to what she posts about most: beauty, fashion, shoes, outfits, and more. The travel influencer talks about blogging as well as numerous locations so those categories reflect those interests: travel blogging, travel tips, solo travel, women who travel, (as well as specific locations she visits) Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil.

Randomizing

Once your hashtags are sorted into categories, it’s a cinch to randomize them and add them to your posts. If you’re working on the travel influencer’s page, and posting a new photo from Medellín, you’ll want to use hashtags from travel tips, solo travel, women who travel and Colombia, while leaving out the other categories. It’s a simple matter to simply check the boxes for the categories you do want to use and then generate hashtags.

You can also determine how many hashtags you want to generate. Many creators like to pre-select 25-27 hashtags from a variety of categories and then hand-select the last few to be very specific to the post. If you’re posting to Pinterest, generate 4-6 random hashtags from your selected categories. If you’re posting to Instagram, generate up to 30 (the maximum for Instagram). It’s all up to you.