IS TWITTER THE NEXT SECOND LIFE?

THIS IS A VERY INTERESTING ARTICLE TO ME BECAUSE IT PROVES WHAT I BEEN SAYING SINCE BLOG WORLD. COMPANIES DON’T UNDERSTAND WHERE THE CONSUMERS HEAD IS ANYMORE NOT JUST IN MUSIC. PEOPLE WANT REAL INFO NOT SOMEBODY THATS PAID TO SEND A MESSAGE. TAKE DELTA FOR INSTANCE WHAT OTHER INFORMATION ARE THEY GIVEN OUT ON THEIR TWITTER PAGE BESIDES WHAT WE ALREADY SEE IN THE COMMERCIALS AND IN THE AIRPORT? WHO ARE YOU TALKING TOO ON THE VERIZON PAGE? THAT’S WHY THEY HAVE LESS THAN ME AND ANYBODY ELSE WHO’S HANDS ON. THAT LAZY, OH WE CAN GET ANYTHING OVER ON OUR CONSUMER DAY IS OVER!!!!! WHY WOULD APPLE HAVE A TWITTER PAGE? WHAT ARE THEY GONNA GIVE THEIR FOLLOWERS THAT NONE FOLLOWERS WANT GET? I COULD GO ON AND ON ABOUT THIS, LIFERS WHAT DO YOU THINK? PS TODD HOLLA AT ME

Is Twitter the Next Second Life?

February 08, 2010 – Digital and Mobile

By Todd Wasserman, Brandweek

If you’re a marketer who has steered clear of Twitter, your (non)strategy may be paying off! It’s possible that this Twitter thing may just take care of itself.

In the middle of last year, Twitter’s growth slowed from 7.8 million new users a month to 6.2 million, according to a recent study from RJ Metrics. That report also found that only 17 percent of Twitter users updated their accounts in December — an all-time low. An earlier study by the Nielsen Co. revealed 60 percent of Twitter users do not return from one month to the next. Taking that into account, it’s tempting to conclude that Twitter is following in the footsteps of another social-media ghost town, Second Life.

In fairness, the raw data may be deceptive. Twitter’s proponents argue that its numbers appear low because so many people access Twitter via ways other than its Web site. But some marketers are ready to write the microblogging service off. “I’m not a big fan of Twitter,” says Joel Ewanick, group vp of marketing for Hyundai. “My Twitter meter has gone down.” Ewanick says he finds Facebook, which has copied most of Twitter’s best features, to be a superior platform. “[Twitter has] become the butt of a joke. You start seeing in popular culture people making fun of Twitter.” Geoff Cottrill, CMO for Converse, seconded that.

Twitter ‘Overrated’

“Twitter is a little bit overrated,” he says. “There will be a new media toy that will replace it in a year or two.” Meanwhile, according to VentureBlog, Procter & Gamble execs recently told venture capitalists that they didn’t think Twitter was “particularly relevant to what they’re doing on the brand-building and advertising side” and that “they do not believe that Twitter will ever approach what they get out of a Google or Facebook.” (A P&G rep declined comment on the report.)

Like Second Life, Twitter has become a wasteland for brands. Verizon, a company that spent more than $1 billion on advertising in 2009, has around 5,000 followers — about 0.3 percent the amount that Perez Hilton has. Coca-Cola has 15,000. Apple’s not even on Twitter. And some corporate Twitter accounts suffer from prolonged neglect. Delta Airlines’ Twitter page went from June 17 to Dec. 22 last year without a single update. Delta reps could not be reached for comment.

Sienna Farris, director of social media marketing strategy for New York agency Strawberry Frog, says that Twitter isn’t for everyone. Farris, like other experts contacted for this article, says that all marketers should be mining the real-time mentions of their brands on Twitter, but otherwise, there are just a few areas where Twitter makes sense for marketers — customer relations management, the hawking of deals and as a vehicle for promotions. (Twitter also seems to be a great venue for smaller, lesser-known brands.)

Success At Large Brands? A Look At Dell

When it comes to Twitter’s success among large brands, Dell is the exception that proves the rule. The PC maker not only has a large following on the platform, but also has some ROI to show as well. The brand claimed $6.5 million in Twitter revenues in 2009. About half of that came from @DellOutlet, a Twitter account dedicated to announcing deals at the company’s factory outlet (the rest of the revenues come from international Twitter accounts). Richard Binhammer, senior manager of corporate affairs better known by his Twitter name “RichardatDELL,” says that with its permission-based, real-time nature, Twitter makes sense for that brand. “At Dell Outlet, we don’t know what our inventory’s going to be from day one to day two,” says Binhammer. “It’s pretty unpredictable. It’s an outlet store, so it’s open-box specials.” @DellOutlet, at this writing, has close to 1.6 million followers.

@DellOutlet is actually one of dozens of Dell Twitter accounts. Some of those are dedicated to customer service, which raises the question: Is this CRM or PR? Binhammer says that’s irrelevant. The real goal, he maintains, is reaching consumers: “It’s not about us launching a customer support channel, and that channel happens to be Twitter. What happens is, we go wherever our customers are on the Web. Some of our customers happen to be on Twitter. Where they are is where we need to go.”

Dell’s success didn’t go unnoticed. Comcast, which suffered the same kind of blog-based complaints over customer service as Dell has, now operates a successful Twitter CRM program. In July, Best Buy also launched Twelpforce, a Twitter-based customer-relations management plan that was meant to blur the lines between customer service and marketing, according to company CMO Barry Judge. “Clearly, Twelpforce has the potential to be a resource for our customers in helping them do the things they aspire to with technology,” Judge wrote on his blog. “Secondly, I think Twelpforce can be a catalyst to think very differently across our company about customer service. No longer do we need to passively wait in our channels for people to come to us. With Twelpforce specifically and social media in general, we can actively seek out the conversations that increasingly are happening outside our channels.” Despite Best Buy’s commitment, though, to date the company’s Twitter page has only about 19,000 followers.

Personalities On Twitter

Looking at the astronomical follow rates of celebrities like Ashton Kutcher or Oprah Winfrey, it’s tempting to conclude that unless you’re peddling deals like Dell Outlet, the best strategy is to hitch your brand to a personality. That’s what Ford did with Scott Monty, a former advertising exec-turned-Twitter gadfly who is now the head of social media for Ford Motor. As a sort of living representative of Ford, Monty, who has about 37,000 followers, has appeared on the Adam Carolla Podcast and at BlogWorld Expo. “We’re getting a ton of listeners or attendees who wouldn’t think about Ford or a Ford product,” Monty says. Jim Tobin, president of Ignite Social Media, a Web 2.0 marketing consultancy, says Ford benefits greatly by the association with Monty. “He’s a Ford employee,” explains Tobin, who believes Monty has more credibility than a celebrity endorser. “Everyone knows that Tiger [Woods] is getting paid to promote whatever he’s promoting.”

But Monty appears to be an anomaly. Other brands that have tried to launch a persona on Twitter have failed to win many fans. Adam Denison, Monty’s counterpoint at Chevrolet, has 2,300 followers. Denison says the company decided in December to switch its Twitter focus to its Chevrolet account — which had about 1,600 followers at last check.

Chevrolet is having more luck on Facebook, where its official site has more than 62,000 fans. David Berkowitz, senior director of emerging media and innovation for interactive shop 360i, says anemic Twitter accounts and robust presences on Facebook will be the norm. “For some brands, just maintaining their turf [on Twitter] with the occasional update might be enough,” he says. “A bigger danger is to go in and make it clear they’re going to get involved [in Twitter] and then ignore it.” Not too many brands are doing the former these days.

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14 Comments
  1. The question is is what are you going to do with Jermainedupri.tv? I think twitter is going to be played out soon just like Myspace. The game is going back to the web site but this time with a twist……

    What is next?

    Spock

  2. I really hope not…. I agree with spock, I think it will soon get old! It already has begun to bore me.

  3. The thing that makes twitter so different than myspace is that you are really interacting with some of the people you thought you would never have ever had a chance to talk to.. Plus as far a business its free advertising.. Twitter is like having free money that you dont wanna throw away.. If you are just getting staring your own clothing line what better way to give away free shirts or get your band out there than twitter its free and everyone is on it..

  4. The Twitter life is the best…When it comes to music, games, books, TV shows, Electronics. I think Twitter is the main source that every company should have. Its just the way companies are working the twitter that leads people to unfollow them and really not care. If companies talked to there followers and asked them questions like “What do you think could be added to *such and such* device” then Twitter will feel more useful to these companies. The reason why these companies are not getting what they want out of twitter is because there simply not interacting there just promoting people to buy things and not asking or answering questions.

    Twitter may be falling off for some people but there is many people who cant go 2 min without posting something. There will always be a market of people via Twitter..
    But thats just what i think

  5. I agree with JD that you need fresh content to thrive on Twitter, BUT corporations arent doing well on Twitter because Twitter is a celebrity-following culture. This is the first time, more so than even MySpace, that the average person can connect to celebrities. First thing people do when they join Twitter is to follow their favorite celebrity. That only lasts so long because there is only so many times you can stand Diddy’s QOTD or BowWow uploading pictures of himself. Swizzbeats has a good mix of content. I cant seem to be in Vegas the same weekend JD is spinning at Prive (but ppl here in LA say nothing compares to a JD party!)

    When creating my clothing company (http://www.social-clothing.com) everyone said you have to have a twitter account. I did anyways but I have been telling my hardcore Twitter friends that Twitter is on its way out BECAUSE there is no REAL way to CONNECT with people (ie: like how well fB suggests people you might know, connecting with your email account etc)…. like MySpace. I find out months later that I have friends on Twitter. The Twitter “stategy” to get new friends is to follow someone first, and reply to them hoping they will eventually follow you. So you have people following twice as many people as following them. This in turn leads to information overload. I follow less than 100 people and it’s already overload… tweets get lost in the shuffle. I can’t imagine anyone can really pay attention to their 500+ (example) followers. At least the MySpace stategy to get new friends was to post on people’s wall’s and photos. New people would see what you wrote and befriend you. It created a superficial culture of following chicks with hot pictures, but you can build a network nonetheless. I believe that Facebook has been long term potential because they always take the best of other website TRENDS. Once fB “copied” Twitter with their “Live updates”, I knew fB just trumped Twitter’s A.D.D. style of information updating. Done. Video uploading like YouTube, done. Flickr style picture uploading, done. Im not saying facebook is the end all. The only real thing holding fB back is the culture to only add people you really know, whereas Twitter and MySpace culture was to add anyone.

  6. I hope not….cuz if it is, I’m off that! Them 2nd life muthafuckas are crazy as hell…

  7. It’s a technology phase. Just like every other social networking application online. They all have their “use by” dates. The further in time we go, the more we will see the decline in many applications and electrical products that were once “popular”.

    Twitter is a FAD!

  8. Twitter has increased people’s connections to celebrities. I agree with that statement made by @Joe310. I never saw that Twitter could be a successful marketing tool UNLESS there was real interaction with the person to the consumer. Trey Songz and JD are perfect examples of how to increase a fan base by REAL interactions. You have to gain the trust of the consumer to even purchase the product. Think of any line of technology, clothing, cars…you name it. You buy specific lines because you trust that what you are buying is quality and it will make you look good or feel good. Using bots on Twitter makes a business seem like its trying to con you into a product. Certain businesses can’t use Twitter though. Big businesses shouldn’t copycat marketing methods..shit gets old.

  9. Ok so Twitter still interests me, and to be honest a lot of these executives that get paid to market and promote follow me. I find that funny and I pay money to intern at these labels. Wink Wink I just want to know what’s going down when it happens. Twitter is like the new international phone call if you will. But I did go back to facebook just to be different and to have a little hide out 4 my true friends. Just like twitter came out Im sure a new one will drop and the executives will follow us there too. We just want interesting content that is all. I don’t want to follow you if you are just posting stuff… Let me into the life of your brand a little bit. That is what is cool about twitter. We can be FRIENDS with people all over the world with an @. Some people don’t like it but it is a sign of humbleness and everyone that I am friends with has created a new relevance with me. Soo…. You do your marketing analysis on that and put that in Brandweek. GoodNight!

    -D.MaL

  10. Everyone has made very interesting points here. One theme that stands out from the comments here is what a lot of people and businesses are beginning to understand; What counts is having genuine connections with your ‘followers’.

    People are now (and have been for a while now) buying twitter followers on ebay. It just seems like gathering more people to spam. This is clearly a misuse of the medium of social networking. I’m seeing too many examples of people using their ‘follower’ number as a scoreboard or dashboard. All to often the mention of Twitter is followed by this statement, “how many followers do you have, or he/she had x number of followers”. The main focus has been how many followers I have. Which as stated in the above article, is a waste of an opportunity to engage with those following you.

    http://www.techcrunch.com/2010/01/31/twitter-followers-ebay-penny/

    “The goal shouldn’t be to have a lot of people to yell at, the goal probably should be to have a lot of people who choose to listen. Don’t need a bullhorn for that.” (Seth Godin)

  11. The way they talk about Second Life as a ghost town and Twitter as inactive just goes to show how little they actually know about social media!

  12. JD is correct. You can’t be lazy when you are trying to do business through your twitter account.

  13. One thing I Kno, 7 I don’t have a Twitter account.! Is that Article couldn’t have made it On there & i did say Article.

  14. 2ndly the whole premiss of twitter is Following. & You follow People. Not Businesses!, if Companies such as delta want to get More activity circulating on there Accounts. they should plug all of their stewardess into the one account, & then get them to update about quirky situations or celebrity passangers.~ i give Game Away but then Again I’m FREE!!!.

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