TikTask logo TikTask
Scheduling by app • 8 min read • TikTask Team

🐦 How do I automate likes, comments and follows on X (Twitter) with TikTask?

Plan X engagement more intentionally with TikTask: automate likes, comments, and follows for selected posts or profiles without turning the page into a vague social-media workflow guide.

x-twitter likes comments follows engagement

If you use X regularly, engagement actions can support visibility and follow-through. TikTask can help you schedule selected engagement actions on X when you want to react to posts, comment on discussions, or follow specific profiles at controlled times. The goal is not blind mass activity. The goal is to organise targeted engagement so it fits a real workflow.

ℹ️
Goal
Use TikTask to prepare Like, Comment, or Follow actions for selected posts or profiles on X, then run them on a schedule that is easier to review and control.

Before you start

  • Decide which action you actually need: Like, Comment, or Follow. Do not treat them as the same workflow.
  • Prepare the target post or profile first so you are not rushing while creating the task.
  • If you are writing comments, prepare the comment text in advance and keep it relevant to the post.
  • Use realistic timing and spacing. Engagement automation should still look deliberate, not spammy.

Steps

1
Select the action
Create a new task and choose the action you want to automate: Add Like, Add Comment, or Follow. That choice determines the rest of the flow.
2
Choose X (Twitter) as the channel
Select X (Twitter) as the channel so TikTask knows which app and action lane the task belongs to.
3
Choose the target post or profile
Open the target content in X and share it to TikTask, or capture the profile you want to follow. Make sure the correct post or account is selected before you save the task.
4
Add comment text if needed
If the action is Add Comment, write the comment now. Keep it short, useful, and specific to the post instead of reusing the same generic reply everywhere.
5
Set the timing
Choose when the action should run. Use spacing that matches a human reviewable workflow instead of stacking too many actions at nearly the same time.
6
Save and review
Save the task, then review it once more before it runs. X engagement tasks are better when they are targeted and intentionally spaced.

Where this workflow is useful

  • Replying to relevant posts during launches, events, or promotions when timing matters.
  • Following selected accounts after a campaign list or prospecting review.
  • Spacing out comments on high-priority posts instead of doing everything manually in one session.
  • Planning lighter supporting engagement around a broader social workflow that also includes Instagram or WhatsApp follow-up.

Good practice before you depend on it

ℹ️
Keep quality higher than quantity
This page works best when you treat likes, comments, and follows as a selective workflow. If you try to automate large-volume engagement without clear targeting, the quality and safety both get worse.
  • Use comments where they add something useful, not just because you can automate them.
  • Avoid stacking many similar actions too closely together.
  • Review targets carefully before scheduling follows.
  • Keep a clean separation between X engagement tasks and DM or message workflows on other platforms.

FAQ

Should I automate likes, comments, and follows together? +
Only when it makes sense for the workflow. They are different actions with different targets and risks, so it is often better to separate them into cleaner tasks.
Do I need to prepare comment text in advance? +
Yes for comment tasks. It is better to prepare the exact reply before you schedule the task so the action stays relevant and readable.
Is this meant for high-volume engagement? +
No. This page works better as a controlled engagement workflow for selected posts or profiles, not as a mass-action system.
Can this be part of a broader campaign? +
Yes. It can support broader social or outreach workflows, but it should stay a clearly targeted engagement layer, not a vague all-in-one automation concept.