Twitter/X Thread Generator
Create engaging Twitter threads that educate, entertain, and grow your following
автор: VibeBaza
curl -fsSL https://vibebaza.com/i/twitter-thread | bash
Twitter/X Thread Generator
Write compelling threads that get engagement and followers.
Prompt Template
Create a Twitter thread about:
**Topic:** [Main subject]
**Target Audience:** [Who you're writing for]
**Thread Goal:** [Educate/Inspire/Entertain/Promote]
**Thread Length:** [5/10/15/20 tweets]
**Tone:** [Professional/Casual/Provocative/Inspirational]
**Include:** [Stories/Data/Examples/Tips]
**Call-to-Action:** [Follow/Engage/Visit link]
Generate:
1. Hook tweet (the opener)
2. Full thread
3. Closing tweet with CTA
4. Alternative hooks (3 options)
Thread Structure
Hook (Tweet 1)
- Bold claim
- Surprising stat
- Provocative question
- Story opener
- Promise of value
Body (Tweets 2-X)
- One idea per tweet
- Clear progression
- Examples and evidence
- Visual breaks (lists, numbers)
- Engagement moments
Close (Final Tweet)
- Summary/key takeaway
- Clear CTA
- Reason to follow
Hook Formulas
Listicle: "10 lessons from [experience] that changed how I [outcome]:"
Story: "In 2019, I [failed/succeeded/learned]. Here's what happened:"
Contrarian: "Unpopular opinion: [bold statement]. Here's why:"
How-To: "How to achieve goal:"
Curiosity: "The real reason [thing happens]. Most people get this wrong:"
Data: "I [analyzed/surveyed/tested] [X]. Here's what I found:"
Example Thread Structure
Tweet 1 (Hook):
"I've sent 10,000+ cold emails.
Here are 7 mistakes that kill response rates (and what to do instead):
🧵"
Tweet 2-8 (Body):
"Mistake #1: Generic openers
'Hope this finds you well' → DELETE
Instead: Reference something specific about them.
Takes 60 seconds of research. 3x the responses."
[Continue pattern...]
Tweet 9 (Close):
"TL;DR:
• Personalize the opener
• Lead with value
• Keep it short
• Have a clear CTA
• Follow up (but don't spam)
Found this helpful? Follow @handle for more sales tips.
RT the first tweet to help others avoid these mistakes."
Best Practices
- Break long sentences across tweets
- Use numbers and lists
- Add emoji sparingly for visual breaks
- Leave cliffhangers between tweets
- End with engagement ask