Paste a thread, the raw tweets or a link to the first one, and Tugan.ai expands it into a complete article: a search-oriented headline, an intro hook, H2 sections that develop each tweet's compressed idea into real prose, a key-takeaways block and a conclusion. A thread is the best first draft you'll ever write, the idea is validated, the structure is already there, one point per tweet, but it disappears from the timeline in 48 hours and Google never sees it. This turns the thread's spark into the asset that compounds: a post on your own domain that ranks for months.
Why turn a Twitter/X thread into a blog post?
- Threads die in 48 hours. The timeline moves on, the thread stops circulating, and the idea you compressed so carefully stops working for you. A blog post keeps earning search traffic for months.
- The engagement already told you what to write. A thread that resonated is a validated topic, converting your winners is content strategy with the guesswork removed.
- Google can't rank your tweets. The long-tail queries your thread answers are searched every day, and the traffic goes to whoever has the article, it should be you, on your own domain.
- You own your blog; you rent your timeline. Algorithm changes, reach throttling and platform drama can't touch an article on your site, it's the durable version of the same idea.
See it in action
X thread (11 tweets, excerpt): We spent $12,000 on paid ads before making a single sale. Then we switched to SEO and hit $20k MRR in 10 months. The full breakdown 🧵 1/ The ads weren't "bad". CPC was $2.40, CTR was fine. The problem: we were renting attention in a market where buyers research for weeks before buying. 2/ SEO play #1: 40 comparison pages ("X vs Y", "X alternatives"). Boring? Yes. But they convert at 9%, triple our blog average. 3/ SEO play #2: programmatic templates. One data set, 120 pages, each answering a real long-tail query. 4/ Month 10: 46,000 organic visits, $20k MRR. The ads are still paused. 5/ Ads rent attention. Content owns it. In a considered-purchase market, own.
# We Spent $12,000 on Ads With Zero Sales. Here's How SEO Took Us to $20k MRR Our first growth channel burned $12,000 without producing a single sale. Our second one took us to $20k MRR in ten months. This is the honest breakdown of both, including the numbers. ## The ads weren't bad. The strategy was. On paper, the campaigns looked healthy: a $2.40 CPC and a respectable click-through rate. The problem sat deeper. We sell into a market where buyers research for weeks before purchasing, and we were renting their attention for seconds at a time. By the time a buyer was ready, the ad impression was long forgotten. ## Play #1: 40 boring comparison pages that convert at 9% The first SEO bet was the least glamorous content imaginable: comparison pages. "X vs Y." "X alternatives." Forty of them. They will never go viral, but they meet buyers at the exact moment of decision, and they convert at 9%, triple our blog average. ## Play #2: 120 programmatic pages from one data set The second bet was programmatic: one well-structured data set, 120 pages, each answering a real long-tail query a human actually types. Individually small, collectively a compounding stream of qualified visits. ## The results after 10 months 46,000 organic visits a month, $20k MRR, and the ad account is still paused. ## Key takeaways - In considered-purchase markets, rented attention expires before the buying decision happens - Decision-stage pages (comparisons, alternatives) convert at multiples of regular blog content - Ads rent attention, content owns it: own, if your buyers research before they buy
What is the Thread to Blog Post?
A Twitter thread to blog post converter expands a thread into a full written article. A thread is long-form thinking compressed into 280-character fragments; the converter reverses the compression, it takes each tweet's point, develops it into flowing paragraphs with context and transitions, and organises the result under proper headings. This is the workflow thread writers have hacked together for years, draft in public, validate with engagement, then rewrite the winners as articles, done in one pass instead of an afternoon. Unlike unroll tools, which give you the raw tweets stacked on a page, the output is an actual article.
How it works
- 1
Paste the thread
Copy the tweets in and paste them as text. No X account connection, no API, no login.
- 2
Tugan maps the argument
It reads the whole thread, identifies the core claim, and treats each tweet as a section-in-waiting with its numbers and examples.
- 3
It expands, not just reformats
Each compressed point becomes developed prose with context and transitions, under a search-oriented H1 and scannable H2s, with a takeaways block.
- 4
Edit and publish
Add an internal link or two, set your target keyword, then paste into WordPress, Ghost or your CMS.
What a great blog post includes
- A search-oriented H1 built around a query people type, not just the thread's hook
- An intro that keeps the thread's hook energy while framing the payoff for a reader
- H2 sections that expand each tweet's compressed point into developed prose
- The thread's real numbers, results and examples, kept accurate and intact
- Transitions and context that tweets never had room for, so it reads as an article, not stacked tweets
- A key-takeaways block and a conclusion, built for skimmers and featured snippets
Who it's for
Writers who draft in threads
Validate ideas in public, then turn the winners into articles, the atomic-essay workflow without the rewrite afternoon.
Founders & indie hackers
Your build-in-public threads hold your best stories. Give them a permanent home that new visitors can actually find.
Content & SEO teams
Mine the founder's thread archive for pre-validated article topics with the source material already written.
Newsletter & blog owners
Fill the content calendar from threads that already proved demand, instead of guessing what to write next.
Benefits
- A thread's 48-hour lifespan becomes an asset that ranks for months
- Expands compressed tweets into real prose, not stacked fragments
- Keeps the thread's numbers, stories and voice intact
- SEO-ready structure: H1, H2s, takeaways, conclusion
- Paste text or a link, no X account connection required
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to connect my X account?+
No. There's no integration and no login, you simply paste the thread as raw text. Your own threads work, and so does any public thread you have the right to repurpose.
How is this different from an unroll tool like Thread Reader?+
Unroll tools stack your tweets on a single page, on their domain, with their branding, and the text still reads like tweets. This writes an actual article: the compressed points get expanded into paragraphs with context and transitions, organised under headings, ready to publish on your own site where the SEO value accrues to you.
A thread is short. Will the post be long enough to rank?+
Yes, because converting is expanding, not reformatting. A 10-tweet thread compresses far more thinking than its word count suggests; each tweet becomes a developed section, and a typical thread yields an 800-1,200-word article. Add one example or personal aside per section and you have a genuinely substantial post.
Will Google treat it as duplicate content?+
No. Duplicate content concerns apply to near-identical text, and the article is a rewrite, expanded prose, new structure, different medium. Tweets aren't competing in Google's index anyway. Publishing the long-form version on your domain is exactly the kind of repurposing search engines are built to reward.
Can I convert someone else's thread?+
Technically yes, any public thread pastes in, but treat other people's threads as a source, not a shortcut: get permission or credit the author, add your own take and examples, and link to the original. Your own thread archive is the better goldmine, it's pre-validated and entirely yours.
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