Article to Twitter Thread

Turn any article into a scroll-stopping X thread — hook tweet, clean structure and a CTA.

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Paste an article URL (or the text itself) and Tugan.ai reshapes it into a tight X/Twitter thread: a hook tweet that earns the click, the article's key points distilled to one idea per tweet, and a CTA that drives follows and clicks back to the source. It reads the whole article — not just the first paragraph — so the thread keeps the strongest arguments and stats rather than a shallow summary.

Why turn a article into a Twitter thread?

  • Articles get buried; threads get shared. Repurposing your post as a thread multiplies its reach without writing anything new.
  • A thread is the best traffic driver on X — a strong final-tweet CTA sends readers straight back to the full article.
  • You can promote the same article ten different ways by threading a different angle each time.
  • It handles the fiddly work: choosing what to cut, chunking to 280 characters, and writing a hook that actually spreads.

See it in action

Input · article

Article: "The 4-Day Work Week: What 61 Companies Learned" "In the largest trial of its kind, 61 UK companies moved to a four-day week with no cut in pay. Six months later, the results were striking. Revenue stayed flat or grew at 24 of the firms compared to the same period a year earlier. Employee resignations fell by 57%. 39% of employees reported feeling less stressed, and sick days dropped by around two-thirds. At the end of the trial, 56 of the 61 companies chose to keep the four-day week, and 18 made it permanent. The takeaway researchers stressed was that productivity didn't fall because teams cut meetings and busywork to protect the extra day off..."

Output · Twitter thread

1/ 61 companies switched to a 4-day week. Same pay, one less day. 6 months later, almost none of them went back. Here's what actually happened (and why it worked) 🧵 2/ First, the fear: "won't output collapse?" It didn't. Revenue stayed flat or GREW at 24 of the firms vs the same period a year before. A shorter week didn't shrink results. 3/ The people numbers were the real story: — Resignations fell 57% — Sick days dropped ~two-thirds — 39% reported feeling less stressed Less burnout, fewer people quitting. 4/ So how did output hold with 20% less time? Teams protected the extra day by killing the waste: Fewer meetings. Less busywork. Tighter focus. The constraint forced better prioritization. 5/ The verdict: 56 of 61 companies kept the 4-day week after the trial. 18 made it permanent. When given the choice, almost nobody went back. 6/ The lesson isn't "work less." It's that most teams are full of low-value work that expands to fill the time you give it. Remove the time, and the busywork goes first. Full breakdown of the study here 👇 [link] Follow for more on the future of work.

What is the Article to Thread?

An article-to-Twitter-thread generator turns a long-form piece into a sequence of connected tweets built for the timeline. Long articles don't travel on X; threads do. The tool extracts the article's spine — its claim, evidence and takeaways — and rewrites it as a hook-led thread where each tweet stands alone, fits 280 characters, and pulls the reader to the next one.

How it works

  1. 1

    Paste the article

    Drop in a URL or paste the full text — your blog post, a guide, or any article you have the right to repurpose.

  2. 2

    Tugan reads it in full

    It analyses the whole article to find the core argument, the best evidence and the key takeaways.

  3. 3

    It builds the thread

    A hook tweet, one idea per tweet under 280 characters, smooth transitions and a CTA back to the article.

  4. 4

    Copy and post

    Copy each tweet into X or your scheduler, tweak the hook, and ship the thread.

What a great Twitter thread includes

  • A hook tweet that frames the article's payoff in a scroll-stopping way
  • The article's strongest stats and arguments, one per tweet
  • Every tweet self-contained and under 280 characters
  • Transitions that maintain momentum down the thread
  • A CTA tweet linking back to the full article for traffic
  • A recap or "the lesson" tweet that crystallises the takeaway

Who it's for

Bloggers & writers

Turn every published article into a thread that drives clicks back to the original post.

Content marketers

Repurpose company blog posts and reports into threads that put research in front of a new audience.

Newsletter writers

Promote each issue as a thread teaser that converts thread readers into subscribers.

Curators & analysts

Summarise a great article (with credit) into a thread your followers actually read.

Benefits

  • Reads the full article, not just the intro
  • Hook tweet engineered to spread on X
  • One idea per tweet, all under 280 characters
  • Final-tweet CTA that drives traffic to the source
  • Thread a new angle from the same article anytime

Frequently asked questions

Can I paste a URL or do I need the full text?+

Either works. Paste the article URL and Tugan reads it for you, or paste the raw text directly if the page is behind a login or paywall you have access to.

Will the thread just repeat the article's sentences?+

No. It rewrites the ideas for the timeline — punchier phrasing, one idea per tweet, a hook and transitions. The substance and stats come from the article, but the writing is built for X, not copy-pasted.

Does it add a link back to the article?+

Yes — the closing tweet includes a CTA back to the full article, which is the whole point if you're using threads to drive traffic. You can edit or remove it if you just want a standalone thread.

Is it okay to thread an article I didn't write?+

You can generate a thread from any article, but only publish threads based on content you wrote or are summarising with clear credit and a link to the original. Don't pass someone else's work off as your own.

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