TG
TGCloner
Automated content for your Telegram channel
Guide

How to repurpose a website, blog, or RSS feed in Telegram

A practical TGCloner guide to using a site, blog, or RSS feed as a content source for your Telegram channel — with rules, a queue, and publishing control.

How it looks in TGCloner

How a scenario becomes a working pipeline

In the TGCloner dashboard, the scenario becomes a clear chain: channel, source, rules, queue, and publication.

Registration takes you to the connection wizard: first the channel, then technical settings and the first source.

  1. 1
    You add your Telegram channel.
  2. 2
    You connect Telegram, RSS, or a website as a source.
  3. 3
    You set processing rules.
  4. 4
    Posts enter the publication queue.
  5. 5
    You review publications if manual control is needed.
  6. 6
    Content goes to the Telegram channel in the selected mode.

If you already have a website, blog, or news section, you can use it as a content source for your Telegram channel. This lets you build a publishing stream from existing content — without writing posts from scratch every day.

In TGCloner this scenario follows the flow:

website or RSS → rules → queue → publishing

When RSS is enough

If the site publishes an RSS feed, start with that. RSS lets TGCloner pick up new posts and add them to the Telegram channel pipeline. This works well for blogs, news sites, corporate publications, job boards, and industry content.

When custom parsing is needed

Custom parsing is needed when the site has no RSS, the feed does not contain the data you need, you need content from a specific section, or the standard feed does not fit your use case. This is an advanced scenario that requires a separate setup discussion.

Why you cannot just forward everything automatically

Website content is not always ready for direct Telegram publication. Sometimes you need to append a signature, filter irrelevant posts, queue content for review, or check it manually. That is why rules and control matter.

How the pipeline works

  1. The website, blog, or RSS feed is connected as a source.
  2. New content enters TGCloner.
  3. Posts pass through your processing rules.
  4. Content collects in the publishing queue.
  5. Posts go live in the Telegram channel.

Combining a website with other source types

A website source works alongside Telegram sources, the RSS catalog, your own RSS links, and custom parsing of other sites. The channel then has a managed system — not a single point of failure.

Editorial responsibility

The channel owner is responsible for the sources chosen, content rights, and final publication. TGCloner helps manage the flow — it does not remove your responsibility for what your channel publishes.

Where to configure a website as a source

Main scenario page: Publishing website content to a Telegram channel.

Related guide: How to connect RSS to a Telegram channel.

Product pipeline

Build a controlled publishing pipeline

Connect your sources, configure the rules, and run your Telegram channel through a publishing queue.

After clicking, you will be able to add a channel, connect a source, and check how posts enter the queue.