Typefully
Typefully is a platform for creating and managing AI-powered content
Verdict
Common use cases
- Draft social posts from meeting notes
- Review scheduled content before publish
- Pull engagement data into weekly reports
- Triage social notifications during standups
- Archive published posts for content audits
Integration
- Vendor
- Typefully
- Category
- other
- Auth
- API_KEY
- Tools
- 5
- Composio slug
typefully
Tools
- Create Draft
Creates a draft in typefully.
- Get Notifications
Get notifications from typefully. can be filtered by kind (inbox or activity).
- Get Recently Published
Get recently published drafts from typefully.
- Get Recently Scheduled Drafts
Get recently scheduled drafts from typefully.
- Mark Notifications Read
Mark notifications as read in typefully. can be filtered by kind and account id.
Setup
Setup guide
- 11. In Switchy, open Settings and navigate to the MCP Integrations section. 2. Click 'Add Integration' and select Typefully from the list. 3. In a separate tab, log into Typefully and go to Settings > API to generate a new API key. 4. Copy the key and paste it into the Switchy dialog, then click 'Connect'. 5. Switchy will verify the key and confirm the connection. 6. Open any Space and type '@Typefully' followed by a command like 'get recently published' to test the integration. 7. If the MCP returns your recent posts, you're ready to use it in workflows.
What teammates see: by default, memories from Typefully are scoped to the Space (PROJECT visibility) - you can mark any memory PRIVATE or share it ORG-wide.
Works well with
Top models
Compatibility data appears once enough Spaces have used this MCP together with a given model.
How Switchy teams use it
Starter prompts
Draft From Transcript
@Typefully create a draft thread from this transcript. Pull out the three key takeaways and write each as a standalone tweet with a conversational tone.Open in a Space →
Check Scheduled Queue
@Typefully get recently scheduled drafts. Show me the next five posts going out this week with their scheduled times.Open in a Space →
Summarize Recent Posts
@Typefully get recently published drafts from the last seven days. Summarize the topics we covered and note which posts got the most engagement.Open in a Space →
Triage Notifications
@Typefully get notifications from my inbox. List any unread mentions or replies and mark them as read once I've reviewed them.Open in a Space →
Archive Published Content
@Typefully get recently published drafts from the last 30 days. Format them as a markdown list with publish dates and links.Open in a Space →
Example outputs
Illustrative - representative of the model's voice and quality, not literal recordings.
@Typefully what's been published to my Twitter account in the last week?
Here are your recently published posts from Typefully: 1. Thread on API design patterns (Jan 15, 9:30 AM) — 3 tweets, 47 likes, 12 retweets 2. Single tweet about new feature launch (Jan 14, 2:15 PM) — 89 likes, 23 retweets 3. Thread on team collaboration tools (Jan 12, 11:00 AM) — 5 tweets, 31 likes, 8 retweets All posts performed above your account average for engagement. The API design thread had the highest reply rate at 8%.
This example uses the Get Recently Published tool to surface posting history. Typefully returns metadata like engagement stats and timestamps, which the AI can summarize. Note that 'recently published' scope depends on your account's activity level — high-volume accounts may only see the last day or two.
@Typefully create a draft thread: '1/ Why async communication matters for remote teams' then add two follow-up tweets about meeting fatigue and documentation culture
Draft created in Typefully: Tweet 1: "Why async communication matters for remote teams" Tweet 2: "Meeting fatigue is real. When every decision requires a Zoom call, you're optimizing for presence over progress. Async-first means written context, threaded discussions, and letting people work in their peak hours." Tweet 3: "Documentation culture isn't bureaucracy — it's how you scale knowledge. The question you answer in Slack today will be asked 10 more times. Write it down once, link it forever." The draft is saved in your Typefully account and ready for scheduling or further editing.
This demonstrates the Create Draft tool, which writes content directly into your Typefully workspace. The AI generates tweet copy based on your prompt, but you'll want to review tone and length before publishing. Drafts are not auto-scheduled — you control when they go live.
@Typefully check my notifications and summarize anything urgent from the last 24 hours
You have 8 new notifications in Typefully: Inbox (3): - Reply from @designleader asking about your API thread — mentions wanting to collaborate - DM from @techwriter offering guest post opportunity - Mention in a thread about remote work tools Activity (5): - Your feature launch tweet hit 100 likes - 3 new followers after your API design thread - Retweet from @devtools account (12K followers) The reply from @designleader seems time-sensitive based on their follow-up question. I can mark these as read or draft a response if you'd like.
This uses Get Notifications filtered by recency. Typefully separates inbox (replies, DMs, mentions) from activity (likes, follows, retweets), so the AI can triage what needs your attention. The Mark Notifications Read tool is available as a follow-up action, but won't auto-execute without your confirmation to avoid accidental dismissals.
Use-case deep-dives
When Typefully MCP fits a solo content calendar workflow
A solo social media manager running 3 brand accounts uses Typefully to batch-schedule threads every Monday morning. The MCP's 5 tools let them draft posts, check what's already scheduled, and mark inbox notifications read without leaving their AI workspace. This works cleanly if they're already paying for Typefully and want to skip the browser tab. The trade-off: Typefully's native UI is fast and purpose-built for thread composition, so the MCP only saves time if you're already context-switching into Switchy for other tasks (like pulling analytics or drafting from research notes). If your entire workflow lives in Typefully's app, the MCP adds friction. Use this when you're orchestrating social posting alongside other team work in one shared workspace.
Where Typefully MCP falls short for multi-client agencies
A 6-person agency managing 12 client Twitter accounts needs to draft posts, get client sign-off, then schedule. Typefully's MCP can create drafts and check scheduled posts, but it doesn't expose approval workflows or client-specific permissions. The agency ends up toggling between Switchy (for drafting with AI), Typefully's web UI (for client review links), and Slack (for approval pings). The MCP saves one step—creating the draft—but doesn't collapse the handoff chain. If your agency workflow depends on Typefully's collaboration features (comments, approval states, team roles), the MCP is too narrow. It's a drafting shortcut, not a workflow replacement. Stick with Typefully's native app for client-facing work; use the MCP only if you're a solo operator with full control.
When Typefully MCP speeds up repurposing content
A newsletter writer publishes long-form posts weekly, then repurposes key points into Twitter threads. They use Switchy to summarize the newsletter draft, then call Typefully's Create Draft tool to push 5-7 tweet threads directly into their scheduling queue. The MCP's Get Recently Scheduled tool lets them verify the thread landed without opening a browser. This workflow saves 10 minutes per post because the writer never leaves the AI workspace. The constraint: Typefully's MCP doesn't support media uploads or poll creation, so threads with images still require a manual pass in the web UI. Use this if your threads are text-heavy and you're already drafting in Switchy. Skip it if your content is visual-first or you need Typefully's advanced formatting tools.
Frequently asked
What does the Typefully MCP do in Switchy?
It lets your team create drafts, check scheduled posts, and manage notifications in Typefully without leaving Switchy. You can pull recently published content, see what's queued, and mark notifications read. Useful if you're coordinating social posts across team members and want to keep everything in one workspace instead of switching tabs.
Do I need a Typefully API key to connect this MCP?
Yes. This integration uses API key authentication, so you'll need to generate one from your Typefully account settings. Anyone on your team with a Typefully account can create their own key. No OAuth flow or admin approval required — just paste the key into Switchy and you're connected.
Can the Typefully MCP publish posts directly or only create drafts?
It only creates drafts. You can't hit publish from Switchy. If you need to schedule or post immediately, you'll still open Typefully itself. The MCP is designed for drafting and monitoring — checking what's scheduled, what went live, and clearing your notification queue — not for final publishing decisions.
How is this different from just using Typefully's web app?
The MCP brings Typefully data into Switchy's shared context, so your team can reference scheduled posts or recent content while working on other tasks. If you're already in Switchy coordinating campaigns or writing briefs, you avoid the context switch. For solo users who live in Typefully anyway, the web app is probably faster.
Who on the team should connect the Typefully MCP?
Whoever manages your social calendar or needs to check post status regularly. If multiple people draft content, each can connect their own Typefully account with their own API key. The MCP doesn't share drafts across team members — it's tied to the individual account that generated the key.