The Mercury News Weekend

Twitter sets sights on Japan

Socialmedi­a firm eyes country for revenue from data for businesses

- By Yuri Kageyama

TOKYO — Twitter has its eyes on Japan, with its 35 million users, to make money from companies eager to use Twitter data to research retail trends, manage inventory and improve customer service.

Although tweets are public, the San Franciscob­ased social media company offers special technologi­es for better analyzing them, taking into account all tweets, including those in archives, through partner companies such as NTT Data and NetBase, which pay Twitter.

Randy Almond, Twitter’s head of data business marketing, told reporters Thursday the partners in turn get paid by companies hoping to improve their businesses using informatio­n from Twitter data. Twitter rarely gets paid directly by the brands.

Examples include monitoring consumer reactions to a new product, the demographi­cs of users or complaints about what’s not in stock at a store. All that can be tracked by Tweets, Almond said.

Twitter says it deals properly with people’s privacy concerns, and the strength of Twitter is that the informatio­n is immediate, and all public, unlike private messages or email.

“That is something we take very seriously at Twitter,” Almond said of security issues. “We don’t surprise the user because, if we do that, then that means that you as a user may not want to use Twitter.”

Making money off online services is a challenge, and data analysis sales are one way Twitter is tackling that problem. The company does not break down revenue for data marketing.

In the U.S., for instance, a coffee retailer began to offer baristas college scholarshi­ps to retain them as employees after finding out through Twitter data that loyal customers fled after their favorite baristas quit.

In Japan, tweets from regular people are getting splashed in attractive ways at huge displays at events and baseball games, using special curation technology, according to Twitter.

The number of Twitter users in Japan has grown fivefold since 2011.

Japanese was the first language Twitter was offered in after English, and Japanese is the most frequently used non-English language on Twitter.

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