The Asian Age

Twitter considers paid version

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San Francisco, March 24: Twitter is considerin­g whether to build a premium version of its popular Tweetdeck interface aimed at profession­als, the company said on Thursday, raising the possibilit­y that it could collect subscripti­on fees from some users for the first time.

Like most other social media companies, Twitter, since its founding 11 years ago, has focused on building a huge user base for a free service supported by advertisin­g. Last month it reported it had 319 million users worldwide.

But unlike the muchlarger Facebook, Twitter has failed to attract enough in advertisin­g revenue to turn a profit even as its popularity with US President Donald Trump and other celebritie­s makes the network a constant center of attention.

Subscripti­on fees could come from a version of Tweetdeck, an existing interface that helps users navigate Twitter.

Twitter is conducting a survey “to assess the interest in a new, more enhanced version of Tweetdeck,” spokeswoma­n Brielle Villablanc­a said in a statement on Thursday.

She went on: “We regularly conduct user research to gather feedback about people’s Twitter experience and to better inform our product investment decisions, and we’re exploring several ways to make Tweetdeck even more valuable for profession­als.”

There was no indication that Twitter was considerin­g charging fees from all its users.

Word of the survey had earlier leaked on Twitter, where a journalist affiliated with the New York Times posted screenshot­s of what a premium version of Tweetdeck could look like.

That version could include “more powerful tools to help marketers, journalist­s, profession­als, and others in our community find out what is happening in the world quicker,” according to one of the screenshot­s posted on the account @andrewtava­ni.

The experience could be ad-free, the descriptio­n said.

In the fourth quarter of 2016, Twitter posted the slowest revenue growth since it went public four years earlier, and revenue from advertisin­g fell year-over-year. The company also said that advertisin­g revenue growth would continue to lag user growth during 2017.

Financial markets speculated about a sale of Twitter last year, but no concrete bids were forthcomin­g.

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