Craft and publish engaging content in an app built for creators.
NEW
Publish anywhere
Post on LinkedIn & Mastodon too. More platforms coming soon.
Make it punchier š
Typefully
@typefully
We're launching a Command Bar today with great commands and features.
AI ideas and rewrites
Get suggestions, tweet ideas, and rewrites powered by AI.
Turn your tweets & threads into a social blog
Give your content new life with our beautiful, sharable pages. Make it go viral on other platforms too.
+14
Followers
Powerful analytics to grow faster
Easily track your engagement analytics to improve your content and grow faster.
Build in public
Share a recent learning with your followers.
Create engagement
Pose a thought-provoking question.
Never run out of ideas
Get prompts and ideas whenever you write - with examples of popular tweets.
@aaditsh
I think this thread hook could be improved.
@frankdilo
On it š„
Share drafts & leave comments
Write with your teammates and get feedback with comments.
NEW
Easlo
@heyeaslo
Reply with "Notion" to get early access to my new template.
Jaga
@kandros5591
Notion š
DM Sent
Create giveaways with Auto-DMs
Send DMs automatically based on engagement with your tweets.
And much more:
Auto-Split Text in Posts
Thread Finisher
Tweet Numbering
Pin Drafts
Connect Multiple Accounts
Automatic Backups
Dark Mode
Keyboard Shortcuts
Creators loveĀ Typefully
150,000+ creators andĀ teams chose Typefully to curate their Twitter presence.
Marc Kƶhlbrugge@marckohlbrugge
Tweeting more with @typefully these days.
š Distraction-free
āļø Write-only Twitter
š§µ Effortless threads
š Actionable metrics
I recommend giving it a shot.
Jurre Houtkamp@jurrehoutkamp
Typefully is fantastic and way too cheap for what you get.
Weāve tried many alternatives at @framer but nothing beats it. If youāre still tweeting from Twitter youāre wasting time.
DHH@dhh
This is my new go-to writing environment for Twitter threads.
They've built something wonderfully simple and distraction free with Typefully š
Santiago@svpino
For 24 months, I tried almost a dozen Twitter scheduling tools.
Then I found @typefully, and I've been using it for seven months straight.
When it comes down to the experience of scheduling and long-form content writing, Typefully is in a league of its own.
After trying literally all the major Twitter scheduling tools, I settled with @typefully.
Killer feature to me is the native image editor ā unique and super useful š
Visual Theory@visualtheory_
Really impressed by the way @typefully has simplified my Twitter writing + scheduling/publishing experience.
Beautiful user experience.
0 friction.
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
Queue your content inĀ seconds
Write, schedule and boost your tweets - withĀ noĀ need forĀ extra apps.
Schedule with one click
Queue your post with a single click - or pick a time manually.
Pick the perfect time
Time each post to perfection with Typefully's performance analytics.
Boost your content
Retweet and plug your posts for automated engagement.
Start creating a content queue.
Write once, publish everywhere
We natively support multiple platforms, so that you can expand your reach easily.
Check the analytics thatĀ matter
Build your audience with insights that makeĀ sense.
Writing prompts & personalized postĀ ideas
Break through writer's block with great ideas and suggestions.
Never run out of ideas
Enjoy daily prompts and ideas to inspire your writing.
Use AI for personalized suggestions
Get inspiration from ideas based on your own past tweets.
Flick through topics
Or skim through curated collections of trending tweets for each topic.
Write, edit, and track tweetsĀ together
Write and publish with your teammates andĀ friends.
Share your drafts
Brainstorm and bounce ideas with your teammates.
NEW
@aaditsh
I think this thread hook could be improved.
@frankdilo
On it š„
Add comments
Get feedback from coworkers before you hit publish.
Read, Write, Publish
Read, WriteRead
Control user access
Decide who can view, edit, or publish your drafts.
Getting to your first 1000 customers looks like this.
The litany of posts I found was pretty useless... except the one by
@darynakulya who co-founded @OpenPhone w/ @mahyarraissi
It's a 15-min read, or here are my notes: only actionable, no bs insights! š§µ
#SaaS#Growth
When @OpenPhone got into @ycombinator, they had 60 users.
Stage 1: 0 to 1400 free users in 5 months. How? 2 channels
a) Facebook groups
No promotional posts but asking the audience if they ran into the pb they were solving. Ask if they'd like to join the beta, without adding the link (sounds spammy)
b) Encouraging WoM
Engaging with users in-app, informing them when their feedback was in prod.
Stage 2: 0 to 100 paying customers
60 free users converted to paying the $9/plan. @darynakulya found the other ones through
a) Reddit: she monitored adjacent words and topics, engaged in conversations
b) Facebook groups again, but different approach
No promotional posts, but she offered group admins to run Q&A sessions for their members on topics like customer engagement, building stronger customer relationships, and, of course, effective communication.
Stage 3: 100 to 1,000 paying customers
They joined @ycombinator and started cold outreach.
@) Sending 1000 emails a day did not work.
@darinakulya started breaking them in sub-segments, using PersistIQ.
"You do have to invest more time into your cold outreach when you personalize your emails. However, the return on investment in terms of customer interest is worth it."
b) They also invested time getting a deeper understanding of users, the most useful question was: āHow disappointed would you be if OpenPhone didnāt exist?ā
They used this @typeform that triggered a @slackhq notification. That way, they refined the personas.
c) PR also helped. @techcrunch@producthunt@darinakulya's advice:
"If you choose to go down the media route, get targeted. Focus on the media sources your audiences naturally tune into rather than the national news sources."
d) Encouraging word of mouth again. How?
rapid product updates + timely personal support, leading to glorious reviews
My fav š part of the article is how @darinakulya would do differently today.
a) Share the mission earlier
"Quite frankly, people donāt care about your product. Itās the āwhyā behind your product that resonates with them, and thatās even more important if you havenāt launched your product yet."
b) Start cold outreach earlier
They started when the product was paying. It would have been easier when the product was in free beta
c) Building an audience before building the product
"Customers are far more likely to purchase from a person they already trust than from a new startup with no recognition or traction."
d) Dive into customer data sooner
They lost 96% of their users when switching to paying. Embedding a @survicate survey into an email would have helped understand why.
To wrap it up, the 4 questions we should ask ourselves: