Thursday, March 26, 2009

Twitter to Charge?

Twitter is further solidifying plans to implement a premium account structure for "power" users or companies.

Co-Founder Biz Stone confirmed that the company recently hired a product manager to develop commercial accounts, but reiterated that the service would be "free to use by everyone," and for-profit services would be add-ons.

In other words, users would pay a small nominal fee for additional services. No launch date has been set, however, on these commercial features.

There was no specificity afforded about the type of features that may be offered for a fee, but sites like Business Insider have a few speculations:

We could see a lot of companies paying $10 or $20 a month for the service, even for simple tools. But we could also see many companies — Comcast, JetBlue, Starbucks, etc. — paying more than one hundred dollars per month for really good, insightful tools.

In an email to the publication, Stone confirmed the trick would be to find services that will "improve the experience."

"Will it be account verification? Will it be lightweight analytics? Will there be opportunities for introducing customers to businesses on Twitter[?] So many questions. But the key is to understand that Twitter will remain free for all to use—individuals and companies alike," he persisted.

Recent figures from Nielsen pegged Twitter's year-on-year growth at an astronomical 1,382%.

Hoping to harness that traffic, a handful of services have tried leveraging the company's present dearth of a business model. Magpie enables users to sell their "tweets" and Twitter backgrounds as ad space. Each user is paid according to his number of followers. And ExecTweets, a Microsoft-sponsored site launched by Federated Media this month, displays tweets from business executives. Twitter receives a cut of the profit.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Twitter and Facebook Integration

Tweetdeck, a desktop client reportedly used by about 13% of Twitter users, launched an update that features Facebook integration, reports AllFacebook.

Tweetdeck aggregates data streams from Twitter, Twitscoop, 12seconds, and Stocktwits. It allows users to split feeds, organize those they follow into groups (work, personal, etc.) and conduct searches across the twittersphere to monitor topics of choice.

The Facebook integration incorporates status updates from the social network into the mix. (The new version is still in beta, but available to the public (download).

To use the new feature, users sign into Facebook and give Tweetdeck authorization. Then, from within Tweetdeck, they click on the Facebook icon at the top, which will add a new column that shows their Facebook friends' most recent status updates, which can be tweeted or emailed out to anyone. The stream updates once a minute.

Tweetdeck also supports real-time chat with Facebook friends, Mashable points out. If the person's name is green (signaling that they are online), users can initiate a Facebook chat session from within Tweetdeck.

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