Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Disappearing Act: Twitter Reports Flatlining User Growth

The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2016 10:45 AM
    SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter set out to build a virtual town square bustling with billions of people. But it's starting to look more like a novelty stand as the masses flock to other services that strike a more personal chord.
     
    The San Francisco company showed no user growth at all in a fourth-quarter report released Thursday, the clearest signal yet that the one-time trendsetter is struggling to remain relevant. That leaves it with 320 million monthly users — roughly one-fifth the size of Facebook.
     
    CEO Jack Dorsey is working hard to reconfigure the decade-old service. That's trickier than it sounds, since he also needs to avoid alienating a core of devoted users who depend on it to tweet their thoughts and track issues that matter to them.
     
    Dorsey took a step in that direction Wednesday, announcing plans to tweak Twitter's timeline to highlight tweets that the service will appeal the most to each user, instead of only presenting them in reverse chronological order. He also has hinted that Twitter may lift its long-standing 140-character limit on the length of each tweet.
     
     
    "We are going to fix the broken windows and confusing parts" of the service, Twitter wrote in a letter accompany the fourth-quarter report.
     
    Flatlining user growth also suggests that Twitter's previous effort to make the service more accessible — Moments, a tool that compiles tweets about major events in a graphic, online-magazine style — hasn't done much to get people excited since its October debut.
     
    Twitter lost another $90 million during the final three months of last year, preserving its profitless history. Revenue rose 48 per cent from the previous year to $710 million, providing some measure of hope that the service can still be turned into a viable of business.
     
    That lacklustre performance has hammered Twitter's stock, now down more than 50 per cent since Dorsey returned as CEO last summer. The shares shed another 50 cents to $14.48 in extended trading after the fourth-quarter numbers came out.
     
    Perceptions of Twitter are souring on both Main Street and Wall Street, according to Marcus Messner, an associate journalism professor and social media specialist at Virginia Commonwealth University.
     
     
    "Twitter is looking kind of old now that there are younger, sexier platforms out there," Messner said. "When you think of Twitter, it is not where you want to be if you want to be an innovative user of social media."
     
    Instead, people — especially teenagers — are gravitating to Snapchat and two other services owned by Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
     
    Even Facebook, two years older than Twitter and seen as an old-fogey hangout by teens and young adults, continues to attract far more new users — and keeps people coming back to find out what's going on with their friends and family.
     
    WhatsApp now has more than 1 billion monthly users while Instagram has more than 400 million, including 100 million added during the first nine months of last year. Snapchat, another photo- and video-sharing service, has about 100 million daily users. Twitter, meanwhile, added 28 million users during all of 2015.
     
    Twitter's biggest problem stems from its inability to make most of its users feel personally connected to what's being shared on the service, according to Gartner Inc. analyst Jennifer Polk. "It's really a very shallow, superficial interaction on Twitter," she says.
     
     
    In contrast, users on Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat are regularly interacting with people they care about. That makes them more likely to share information about themselves, which in turn can help those services sell targeted ads designed to pique an individual's interest.
     
    Polk thinks Twitter has to act fast to avoid a vicious downward spiral: "If Twitter keeps falling further behind in this race, they are going to lose engagement with their existing users, and then they are going to lose insights into those people and they are going to lose advertisers, too."

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Know Your Friends' Travel Itinerary With New Facebook Tool

    Know Your Friends' Travel Itinerary With New Facebook Tool
    An Indian American student has created a Chrome extension that grabs location data from Facebook Messenger and rapidly plots your friends' locations on a map, The Next Web reported.

    Know Your Friends' Travel Itinerary With New Facebook Tool

    Narcissist, Insecure People Post More On Facebook

    Narcissist, Insecure People Post More On Facebook
    People who post Facebook status updates about their romantic partner are more likely to have low self-esteem, a new research has revealed.

    Narcissist, Insecure People Post More On Facebook

    Now Enjoy 'Playboy' On Your Smartphone Sans Nudity!

    Now Enjoy 'Playboy' On Your Smartphone Sans Nudity!
    Are you a "Playboy" lover? Get ready to download it on your smartphone. The Chicago-based lifestyle and entertainment magazine has just launched its "Playboy Now" app.

    Now Enjoy 'Playboy' On Your Smartphone Sans Nudity!

    Gadget Trends

    Get yourself acquainted with the latest gadget trends

    Gadget Trends

    Women! Don't Get 'Thinspired' On Facebook

    Women! Don't Get 'Thinspired' On Facebook
    Viewing images of extremely thin women on Facebook and other social media platforms can trigger body dissatisfaction and eating disorders among women, reveals a new study.

    Women! Don't Get 'Thinspired' On Facebook

    All Rights Reserved: How Old Do I Look Website Raises Privacy Concerns

    All Rights Reserved: How Old Do I Look Website Raises Privacy Concerns
    TORONTO — People who upload photos of their faces to the new How Old Do I Look website are giving Microsoft the right to use the pictures for nearly any purpose, despite the company's promise not to retain them, privacy experts say.

    All Rights Reserved: How Old Do I Look Website Raises Privacy Concerns