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    Twitter Turns Nine on March 21

    Twitter Turns Nine on March 21

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    Who would have thought when Jack Dorsey (Twitter co-founder) sent the first tweet, that action would herald an avalanche of a new world order in the realm of social networking?

    Unlike most brands whose trading name stick with them forever (in some cases), Twitter, from inception to date has had to change names not once, twice but thrice โ€“โ€˜stat.usโ€™, โ€˜Twittrโ€™ and Twitter respectively (what we all know it to be today).

    Forget the name change, the social networking service has distinguished itself as a social media platform to reckon with and the mecca for advertising.

    Its clout in this realm could be attributed to the ad placement that has seen the companyโ€™s revenue skyrocket within the spate of one year, as Jon Myers, EMEA VP and MD for Marin Software, who observed that: โ€œTwitter ad revenue increased 97% from February 2014 to February 2015, due to the platform being such a highly attractive advertising medium for brandsโ€.

    If thatโ€™s not amazing enough, โ€œ9,000 tweets posted per second on the platformโ€ according to Jon.

    Nine years may โ€œseemโ€ relatively young, but, considering the amount of โ€˜water that had passed under the bridgeโ€™ for its competitors, that period could be likened to a century.

    โ€œTwitter has also been quick to embrace mobile, something Facebook admits it took longer to do; smartphone adoption is a key reason Twitter will continue to grow in the years ahead. Mobile already accounts for 85% of Twitter usage and 85% of all its ad revenueโ€ he added.

    Summing it all up:

    โ€œAll of this appears to have been achieved without upsetting existing users – itโ€™s hard to find any evidence that ads are creating Twitter quittersโ€ฆthe platform remains on course to hit 400 million users this month. The bottom line is that Twitter will continue to attract brands if the advertising works and if users are kept happy; keeping this balance in check will be critical. The signs are that, for now at least, it is doing a good job.”

    Just as Neil Armstrong said after landing on the moon: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”, guess Twitterโ€™s narrative relatively will be โ€˜one small step for social media, a hundred giant leaps for social networkingโ€™.

    Some defining moments in Twitter history:

    Whoโ€™s blowing out the candles?

    Featured Image: Photo Credit: clasesdeperiodismo via Compfight cc