The Mercury News

Twitter shakes off the cobwebs with new plans

- By Kate Conger

For years, Twitter remained pretty much the same. One of its most memorable product updates was in 2017 when it doubled the number of characters that could fit into a tweet.

But in recent months, the company has signaled an itch for change, with plans for an audio chat service, a platform for newsletter writers, ephemeral content and new moderation tools that give people more control over their conversati­ons.

On Thursday, Twitter went a step further, announcing ambitious plans to expand with new options to pay for exclusive content from certain users, and to launch communitie­s for specific interests.

“The notion of Twitter even changing feels like a novel concept,” said Kayvon Beykpour, Twitter’s head of consumer product, in a recent interview. “It’s still so far from achieving its potential, despite how much influence and value it does have in the world.”

The heart of Twitter, launched in 2006, is still tweets. But the company urgently wants to attract more users a lot more users and impress skeptical investors while not weighing down its service with bulky features that come across as afterthoug­hts.

Though Twitter was at the center of last year’s tumultuous presidenti­al election and continues to carry an outsized influence in political and media circles, younger social media peers like TikTok, Snapchat and Clubhouse have grown far more quickly.

Snapchat now has 265 million daily active users, more than Twitter’s 192 million. TikTok, which became widely used in the United States in 2018 and does not regularly publish usage figures, said last fall that it had about 50 million daily active U.S. users. And 11-month-old Clubhouse has 10 million users.

Over the next three years, Twitter wants to increase its number of daily active users by at least 64%, to 315 million; increase the speed at which it debuts new features to the public; and at least double its annual revenue, Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s chief executive, said on Thursday at an event for industry analysts and investors.

The shift, Twitter executives and employees say, is overdue. “It comes down to three critiques: we’re slow, we’re not innovative and we’re not trusted,” Dorsey said.

Dorsey has pushed in recent years for the company to expand its mandate beyond 280-character conversati­ons and host broader discussion­s.

But Twitter has long resisted change. Leadership of the company’s product developmen­t team regularly changed, and the small tweaks that Twitter did manage to make were routinely mocked by its users. After he took over product developmen­t in 2018, Beykpour often joked that he, like product leaders before him, could end up on the chopping block.

Last year, Elliott Management, a hedge fund, quietly amassed a 4% stake in the company and then attempted to oust Dorsey, arguing that he was not focused enough on creating innovative new products at Twitter because he also oversees the financial company Square.

Twitter made an agreement with Elliott Management to retain Dorsey. But the episode jolted the company into an acquisitio­n spree. It snapped up a mobile advertisin­g company, a social video app, a podcasting company, a design firm and a newsletter provider.

“We’ve bought almost 20 companies for hundreds of millions of dollars over the past few years,” said Ned Segal, Twitter’s chief financial officer, in an interview earlier this month. “I think our pace of M&A is consistent with the pace of innovation inside the company. We are moving faster.”

Twitter has added a bevy of features, including ephemeral stories that are nicknamed “fleets,” moderation tools that help users limit who can reply to their tweets and live audio chats called Spaces.

It also revamped its network, which had largely been built during Twitter’s early days, before modern cloud-computing services were widely available. The company is also experiment­ing with subscripti­on products, like newsletter­s, that would help creators earn money on Twitter.

“That’s the shift Twitter is in right now: There are a lot of different things that Twitter is willing to try,” said Esther Crawford, a senior product manager at Twitter. Crawford cofounded the social video app Squad, which Twitter acquired in December. “People are actually in this moment of excitement around the experiment­ation that we’re doing.”

On Thursday, Twitter teased new features, like community groups and “Super Follows” that would allow users to subscribe to exclusive content from other tweeters. The subscripti­on option could attract more influencer­s, who have become accustomed to earning revenue from their content on other platforms. Users who “Super Follow” an account could get a badge on their profile indicating their support and access to newsletter­s and other content behind a pay wall, Twitter said.

The new community groups, which Twitter expects to debut later in the year, would allow users to connect with others who share their interests. Communitie­s could also set their own moderation rules, the company said. Twitter also said it would hire engineerin­g teams in regions it plans to grow, like India and Africa.

Some of Twitter’s latest features are not available to all users, so it is hard to quantify their impact. But the company’s audience is growing. Twitter said it added more daily active users in January than it had on average for the previous four Januarys. And Twitter’s stock is higher than it’s been in years, and is up more than 100% from a year ago.

Last week, several Twitter designers held a Space to debate how the app should look. About 30 users listened in to what, before the pandemic, might have been a brainstorm­ing session in a conference room at Twitter’s headquarte­rs. On Wednesday, a group of Twitter engineers responsibl­e for building the company’s Android app held another open meeting.

“When you work in public, you work faster because you’re held accountabl­e to the people you’re interactin­g with,” Crawford said.

But some analysts remain skeptical that all of Twitter’s experiment­ation will amount to reeling in the competitio­n.

“They try all of this experiment­ation and it feels like a lot of small pieces that don’t necessaril­y cumulate into a bigger cohesive app experience or social media experience,” Jessica Liu, a senior analyst at Forrester, said in an interview earlier this month. “I just want to understand from their senior leadership, what is the long-term vision for Twitter?”

 ?? LAURA MORTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? In recent months, Twitter has signaled an itch for change, with plans for an audio chat service, a platform for newsletter writers, ephemeral content and new moderation tools.
LAURA MORTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES In recent months, Twitter has signaled an itch for change, with plans for an audio chat service, a platform for newsletter writers, ephemeral content and new moderation tools.

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