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Turn a Twitter Space Into a Blog Post in 10 Minutes

May 19, 2026

You've just hosted or attended a Twitter Space packed with insights. Now it sits as a replay link — invisible to search engines, inaccessible to anyone who wasn't there, and deleted in 30 days.

A blog post changes all of that. It's indexable, shareable, and permanent. And with the right workflow, you can turn a Space into a well-structured blog post in about 10 minutes.

Why Repurposing Spaces Into Blog Posts Works

The content is already there — you don't have to create it from scratch. A 60-minute Space with 2–3 knowledgeable speakers often contains enough material for 2,000+ words of quality content.

Blog posts from Spaces perform well for two reasons:

  1. Unique insights: Live conversations contain opinions, predictions, and context that you won't find in polished press releases or edited articles.
  2. Long-tail SEO: Space topics — niche crypto calls, investor Q&As, niche podcast-style discussions — often target keywords with low competition and genuine search intent.

The 10-minute workflow below assumes you already have SpacesAI and the Space URL (or a downloaded audio file).

Step 1: Get the Transcript (Under 2 Minutes)

Submit the Space URL to SpacesAI. For a 60-minute Space, the transcript is ready in 3–4 minutes. For shorter Spaces (20–30 min), often under 90 seconds.

While it processes, open a blank document and write the working title and a one-line topic summary. This takes 30 seconds and primes your brain for the editing step.

Step 2: Extract Key Takeaways with AI

SpacesAI automatically generates AI key takeaways — a bulleted summary of the 5–8 most important points from the Space. Read these first.

These takeaways are your post's skeleton:

  • They identify which topics had the most substance
  • They surface quotes worth highlighting
  • They show you the logical order of the conversation

If the takeaways feel off, use the search function to jump to the relevant section in the full transcript and read it directly.

Step 3: Structure the Post (Intro, Sections, CTA)

With the takeaways in front of you, build your structure:

Intro (100 words): What the Space was about, who participated, why it matters. One strong hook sentence.

Main sections (3–5 H2 headings): Each takeaway becomes a section heading. Reorder them so the narrative flows — strongest insight first, or chronological if the Space built toward a conclusion.

Conclusion + CTA: Summarise in 2–3 sentences. Add a relevant call-to-action: "Transcribe your own Space with SpacesAI" or "Subscribe to the newsletter for future Space recaps."

The structure takes about 2 minutes.

Step 4: Clean Up Quotes and Add Context

Now open the transcript and pull the best 3–5 direct quotes from speakers. A direct quote does three things:

  • Adds authenticity (these are real people, not paraphrased)
  • Breaks up the prose
  • Gives search engines a reason to trust the content (original source material)

Format quotes with speaker attribution and timestamp:

"The market is pricing in rate cuts that won't happen this year." — Speaker Name, [Space Title], 18:32

Add 1–2 sentences of context around each quote. Don't let quotes float without framing.

This step takes 4–5 minutes for most posts.

Step 5: Publish and Link Back to the Space

Before publishing:

  • Add 2–3 internal links to relevant content on your site (or to other SpacesAI-powered recaps if you're building a series)
  • Add an external link to the speaker's Twitter/X profile — courteous attribution and good practice
  • Add a note: "This post was generated from a transcript of [Space title] hosted on [date]. Listen to the full replay [here]." (link to the replay while it's still live)

If your editors prefer working in Word, see our guide on how to export Twitter Space transcripts to PDF / DOCX / SRT — the DOCX export is a clean starting point.

FAQ

Do I need to get permission from speakers to publish a blog post? For public Spaces: generally no — public statements are quotable under standard journalistic practice. For private/ticketed Spaces: yes, get explicit permission. When in doubt, ask. See our journalist's guide to quoting Spaces.

Can I publish the full transcript as a blog post? Technically yes, but it's not recommended. Raw transcripts are hard to read and thin on editorial value. A structured post with curated quotes performs better in search and with readers.

How do I handle speaker diarization errors? SpacesAI's speaker labels are 85–95% accurate for clean audio. Always spot-check the quotes you plan to publish against the audio. See our guide on speaker diarization for how to correct labels.

What if the Space was mostly Q&A with audience questions? Q&A Spaces produce excellent FAQ-format posts. Group similar questions together, use the speaker's answers as the response, and add brief editorial framing. This format also tends to perform well for featured snippet ranking.

How long should the blog post be? 800–1,500 words is the sweet spot for repurposed Space content. Long enough to cover the key insights thoroughly, short enough that readers finish it.

Turn a Twitter Space Into a Blog Post in 10 Minutes | SpacesAI