You’ll Want to See What Later Just Did to Outpace Hootsuite, Buffer & Sprout

Later Pushes Forward—and Puts Pressure on Sprout, Hootsuite & Buffer

Later’s quarterly showcase, **The Drop**, revealed new features intended to accelerate social media work for marketers, creators, and agencies. These updates arrive just as the market demands smarter tools rather than more tools.

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In a crowded field—Sprout Social, Hootsuite, Buffer—Later is making a bold move to stand out. Below, we break down its offerings and compare them side by side with the leading alternatives.

What Later Brought to The Drop

Later’s newly announced functionalities fall into several domains:

  • Cross-platform analytics & post tagging
  • External approval workflows (no login required)
  • “Brand DNA”—insights into content drivers and recommended creators
  • Competitive benchmarking vs peer brands
  • Scheduling support for Threads and Snapchat
  • Smarter “best time to post” recommendations for Reels, feed, Stories
  • Unified social inbox for DMs & comments

These aim to lighten heavy lifting—less manual reporting, fewer tool-hops, fewer spreadsheets. Later’s CEO of Social, Nicki Seaborn, emphasizes that the platform’s data scale gives it an edge in spotting trend shifts earlier. The “Future Trends” feature is intended to help clients bet on what’s next, rather than chase what’s passed.

Comparisons: Where Later Stands Among the Rest

Sprout Social — Strengths, gaps, and the opportunity Later addresses

Sprout Social is well known for its unified inbox, publishing calendar, social listening, and analytics functions. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Sprout’s Compose tool allows publishing to multiple accounts and suggests optimal send times, plus it has approval workflows.
Brafton

It offers strong conversation management, team assignments, and content oversight.
Sprout Social
+2
Support Your App
+2

But Sprout can lag in flexibility for custom analytics and non-standard reporting.

Later’s new analytics & post tagging aim to give more freedom to define metrics. Sprout offers “Premium Analytics,” but that often comes at higher tiers.
Sprout Social

On benchmarking: Sprout lets you monitor brand mentions and performance trends. But Later’s side-by-side brand comparisons may challenge Sprout’s lead in competitive intelligence.

When content flows across emerging platforms, Sprout sometimes trails. Later adding scheduling for Threads and Snapchat may win over users who need early access to new social channels.

Hootsuite — breadth, legacy, and where Later pushes back

Hootsuite is an old guard. It supports many platforms, has team features, strong analytics, social listening, and ad campaign integrations. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

It includes social listening as part of many plans.
Zapier
+2
Hootsuite
+2

Hootsuite also offers campaign and ad management from within the same dashboard as organic content.
Hootsuite
+1

Its analytics often go deep—hundreds of metrics, dashboard customization, ROI reporting blending paid + organic.
TechnologyAdvice

But such depth can intimidate smaller teams. Hootsuite’s interface is heavier, pricing is higher, and onboarding takes time.

Later’s strength is aiming for balance: deep insights without overwhelming setup, simpler workflows (approval links, unified inbox) plus fast platform expansion. For teams that want “smart enough, not overly complex,” Later may hit a sweet spot Hootsuite sometimes misses.

Buffer — the lightweight veteran that Later might outgrow

Buffer is often favored by creators, solopreneurs, and small businesses who want simplicity. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}

Its free plan allows up to three social accounts with limited scheduling.
TechnologyAdvice
+3
Buffer
+3
Zapier
+3

Analytics are lean: engagement, reach, clicks. Clean, digestible, but less deep.
TechnologyAdvice
+1

Buffer does not, as of now, include social listening.
Zapier
+2
Planable
+2

Approval flows in Buffer are basic (notes, drafts) but not as flexible as what Later now offers.
ClearVoice
+1

Later is introducing features that are beyond what many Buffer users expect—benchmarking, cross-platform custom analytics, external approval links. Over time, businesses may migrate from Buffer when they outgrow its simplicity and demand more insight without jumping to Hootsuite or Sprout.

Strengths, Risks & What to Watch

Later’s moves show ambition. Its user scale (millions of data points) gives it a unique vantage point. Brands like Fashion Nova, Kylie Cosmetics, and ESPN already use its data-driven features. That suggests the platform’s direction aligns with high-demand use cases.

But execution matters. Rolling out many features at once can risk usability glitches. Clients migrating from other platforms may feel friction. Also, competitors are not passive. Sprout may push deeper customization. Hootsuite may double down on analytics and ad integration. Buffer might expand features just enough to retain its core users.

Companies will judge Later on stability, support, and forward momentum. If The Drop becomes a consistent platform for updates, Later may build trust through predictability.

Summing It Up

Later’s new lineup is meant to nudge marketers past heavy tool stacks and toward more fluent workflows. By combining analytics, approval workflows, competitive insights, and expanded platform reach, Later is positioning itself as a middle path—more serious than Buffer, more approachable than Hootsuite or Sprout.

The competitive landscape will shift. Some users will stick with Sprout’s strong messaging features. Others might prefer Hootsuite’s depth. For teams that want insight without overengineering, Later may be the new favorite.