| name | writing-x-posts |
| description | Create engaging X (Twitter) posts and threads that drive engagement and grow audience. Use this skill when asked to write X/Twitter content, create threads, craft viral tweets, or help with X engagement strategy. Triggers include requests for tweets, X posts, Twitter threads, or social media content for X. |
Writing X Posts
Create engaging X (Twitter) posts and threads that capture attention, drive engagement, and grow your audience.
Core Principles
Brevity is Power
X rewards concise, punchy content. Every word must earn its place. If you can say it in fewer words, do it.
One Idea Per Tweet
Single tweets should contain one complete thought. Threads expand on ideas but each tweet should still stand alone.
Hook or Die
You have ~1 second to stop the scroll. The first line determines everything—engagement, reach, and whether anyone reads the rest.
Content Formats
Single Post
- Length: Under 280 characters (under 200 is better)
- Purpose: One sharp insight, observation, or take
- Best for: Hot takes, quick tips, observations, quotes
Thread
- Length: 5-10 tweets (7 is the sweet spot)
- Purpose: Deep dives, stories, frameworks, lists
- Structure: Each tweet stands alone but builds narrative
- Best for: Tutorials, stories, breakdowns, listicles
Post Anatomy
The Hook (Tweet 1)
The hook has one job: make someone stop scrolling.
Hook formula:
- Bold statement - Surprise, shock, or make a claim
- Tension - Highlight a struggle or pain point
- Twist - Flip expectations
- Open loop - Tease what's coming
See references/hooks.md for detailed hook patterns with examples.
The Body (Tweets 2-6)
- Keep each tweet under 250 characters
- Use cliffhangers every 1-2 tweets
- Add visual breaks every 3-4 tweets
- White space and short sentences aid scanning
The Close (Final tweets)
- Punchy lesson: Crystallize the main takeaway
- Soft CTA: Invite engagement naturally
- Final CTA: Direct ask (follow, repost, reply)
Thread Frameworks
Storytelling Framework
Best for: Personal experiences, case studies
1/ [Hook - outcome or surprising moment]
2/ [Set the scene - context]
3/ [The challenge/conflict]
4/ [The journey - what happened]
5/ [The turning point]
6/ [The lesson]
7/ [CTA - question or follow prompt]
Listicle Framework
Best for: Tips, tools, resources
1/ [Hook - promise of value]
2/ [Item 1 - with brief explanation]
3/ [Item 2]
4/ [Item 3]
5/ [Item 4]
6/ [Item 5]
7/ [Summary + CTA]
Problem-Solution Framework
Best for: Educational content, how-tos
1/ [Hook - the problem everyone faces]
2/ [Agitate - why it's painful]
3/ [Solution intro]
4/ [Step 1]
5/ [Step 2]
6/ [Step 3]
7/ [Results + CTA]
Contrarian Framework
Best for: Thought leadership, hot takes
1/ [Bold contrarian statement]
2/ [What everyone believes]
3/ [Why they're wrong]
4/ [Your counter-argument]
5/ [Evidence/experience]
6/ [The nuanced truth]
7/ [Engagement question]
Writing Guidelines
Tone
- Conversational, not formal
- Confident, not arrogant
- Slightly provocative (when appropriate)
- Authentic, not performative
Formatting
- Short sentences
- Generous white space
- Line breaks for emphasis
- 1-2 hashtags max (or none)
- Emojis sparingly (if brand allows)
What to Avoid
- Corporate speak
- Excessive hashtags
- Links in main tweet (reduces reach)
- Asking for engagement without providing value
- Walls of text
Engagement Mechanics
Algorithm Signals
- Time-on-post (longer = better)
- Quick engagement in first hour
- Replies and quote tweets
- Saves and shares
Best Posting Times
- Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11am and 1-3pm EST
- Consistency matters more than perfect timing
- 2-3 quality threads per week beats daily mediocrity
References
references/hooks.md- Detailed hook patterns with examplesreferences/examples.md- Full thread and single post examples
Quick Checklist
- Does the hook stop the scroll?
- Is each tweet under 250 characters?
- Can each tweet stand alone?
- Is there a clear payoff for reading?
- Does it end with engagement opportunity?
- Zero corporate speak?