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
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..."
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
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
Tugan reads it in full
It analyses the whole article to find the core argument, the best evidence and the key takeaways.
- 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
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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