A Quick Guide To Finding Which Twitter Hashtags You Should Be Using With Hashtagify

Hashtags… they let your tweets be seen and found – if you use the right ones.

So how will you know which hashtags you should use on your next Twitter post? Enter: Hashtagify

Hashtagify helps you find the trending hashtags in your niche, which will hopefully translate to more clicks on your tweets 🙂 This post is a very basic Hashtagify 101 guide. I aim at showing you the absolute basics of using this tool, so you can start playing around with it and experience its power first-handed.

Ready? Let’s start 🙂

Continue reading A Quick Guide To Finding Which Twitter Hashtags You Should Be Using With Hashtagify

How To Use Facebook Ads Effectively, Get Facebook Fans, Build A List And Increase Revenue

Ads in Facebook

Today, I’ll be showing you how to use Facebook Ads to get more Fans, engage, build a list and increase your reach and revenue. I’ll show you:

  1. How I increased my Facebook weekly reach by 30,921%, with no previous experience and using only $25
  2. How to use Facebook Ads effectively and economically to get new Fans and engage with existing ones
  3. How to use Facebook Offers to build a list and increase revenue for your business

Why am I writing this post, and why am I writing it now?

Well, after publishing my previous post (how to create engaging content on Facebook), I received some kind comments via Google+ and email. The day after I published that post I happened to attended a talk by Amy Porterfield, the Facebook Yoda, at the New Media Expo (NMX) conference in Las Vegas, and several people who missed her session have asked me to create a summary. More than anything though, I wrote this post for Julie — who couldn’t attend NMX this year.

My starting point: at the end of 2012 I had my Facebook page has only 5 Fans, probably including my mom.

You know the feeling when something seems to be too big, too complicated and too time consuming to be done? That’s how I felt about starting my Facebook page.

Increase revenue? Forget about it!

I thought getting Fans and running a Facebook Page is a waste of time. So many people were already at it, spending time and money while seeing minimal success (if that). Combine this with the sheer amount of contradicting tips by “Facebook experts” and the need to consistently ship more content… and you will understand why I felt this way.

I just couldn’t wrap my head around it. “What’s the point of a Facebook Page if I have no Fans? And say I get some Fans – what difference does it make?”, I kept asking myself. In an online world that couldn’t seem to stop bitching about Facebook’s ever-changing policies and EdgeRank — it made no sense to follow through.

In August 2012 I launched the Inspiring Innovation Magazine. At the time I had no personal profile on Facebook (I closed it back in 2010), but I wanted to be “part of the game” – so I launched my Facebook page. To be honest besides creating it, I didn’t do too much about it. Have I mentioned that 6 months later I had a staggering Fan base of five??

At the end of December, 2012, my friend Chris Ducker launched the ‘New Business Podcast’ with Amy Porterfield as his guest on the first episode. Listening to it on an evening walk – everything fell into place.

I decided to go for it.

How Used $25 To Increase My Weekly Reach On Facebook By 30,921% Tweet This

After I came back from the New Media Expo in Vegas, I decided to try out Amy’s tips. Here are the results I got over the next 24 horus: A total reach increase of 30,921%, and a Friends of Fans base that has grown to 168,930 people.

How I Increased My Facebook Reach By Over 30,000 percent

It turns out it’s all about understanding how to use Facebook Ads in an effective way. So without further ado, here are my notes from Amy Porterfield‘s session.

Facebook Ads Ground Rules

Before we start, let’s make one thing clear: The rules of the ‘business game’ on Facebook has changed. You can no longer play the game without spending some money.

Facebook is only free if you want to catch up with your high-school friends —Amy Porterfield Tweet This

If spending some is no longer a question to debate, the only questions that remain are A) how much to spend and B) how to spend it?

There are two major categories of Facebook ads:

  1. Ads that send the user to 3rd party websites
  2. Ads that keep the user inside Facebook, allowing him to take beneficial actions without ever leaving his page (in beneficial, I mean beneficial for YOU)

Which of the two is cheaper and more effective to use in the long run? If you guessed the latter – you are correct. So what kind of ads can we run under this category? There are several types, so let’s break them down and define what should be used — and when:

  1. Engagement Ads — Used to get Facebook Fans for your Page
  2. Promoted Posts — Used to engage with existing Fans and friends of Fans
  3. Page Post Ads — Used to engage with existing Fans and reach new ones
  4. Facebook Offers — Used to finally get your Fans into the sales funnel. AKA build your list and increase your revenue

Notice the list is color coded? Here’s the deal: You can’t run any of the red-colored ad types until your Facebook Page has at least 100 Fans (the number varies).

But worry not! Getting your first 100 Fans is really, REALLY easy. It just costs a few bucks — no more than $25 — and probably can be done with less. How? Using Engagement Ads (colored blue in the above list).

Get Facebook Fans Quickly Using Facebook Engagement Ads

Engagement Ads are a great, cheap tool to get new Facebook Fans. Unlike some sleazy services offered out there, most of the Fans you will acquire using these ads will not be spam profiles. The better you craft your ad’s copy, the more quality Fans you’ll get.

How do these ads look like?

Here’s the EXACT ad I’ve run to get the results you’ve seen above.

Inspiring Innovation Facebook Engagement Ads Example

What’s the best thing about these ads? Notice that the user can LIKE the page, without ever visiting it:

Facebook Engagement Ads - Like without leaving the page

Why is that a good thing?

  • More people take action. When people can take action without leaving their current page the action is easier = lower resistance to taking the action
  • Each post you make on your page will be seen by an average of 16% of your Fans, including those who never visited your page at all. So this act of clicking the LIKE button on your ad becomes a soft opt-in to your list.
  • IF the user does decide to ACTUALLY CLICK on your ad and not the Like button, you can (and should) send him to a specific part of your page. I will cover your options on this post too.

Key considerations

1. Ad Should encourage the viewer to click the LIKE button. It’s really easy to do – just use these text formulas “Click LIKE to…” and “Click LIKE if…” for the ad text (notice that LIKE is all UPPERCASE letters):

Facebook Engagement Ads - Call For Action

2. Ad should stir emotion. You can achieve this both with the photo you use and with the text. Following the formula of “Click LIKE to [emotion stirring goal]” or “Click LIKE if [emotion stirring goal/question]“. Like so:

Facebook Engagement Ads - Stir emotion text* Another option instead of stirring emotion is provoking thought

3. Be very specific about the people that see your ads.

With Facebook, you can easily choose to target only people who follow your competitors, or only people who are interested in X, or only people from a certain country, speaking a certain language, of a certain age or gender, with a certain interest – and many other options. If you are advertising a page covering makeup for teenagers, there is no reason for you to target males, and no reason to target females over 21 – that would be a waste of your money.

4. Where do you take these people? Where do you want the user to go to, if he/she actually clicks on your ad?

This is where it gets interesting. Facebook lets you choose your landing page for these people. Now, most Facebook page owners send this ad traffic directly to their main timeline, which is pointless – especially if your page is not yet very active yet.

What you should do instead is send them to an opt-in page. That page should have content compelling enough for the user to opt-in to your mailing list (you already paid for the click, isn’t it better to put your money to good use?). In order to send the user to an opt-in page, you will need to have a custom app on your page that contains that form. Not to worry though, that’s super easy to do!

How To Create A Custom Facebook Landing Page In 5 Minutes Or Less

Here’s a detailed and illustrated guide you (or even better, your VA) can use to create a tab (custom app) on your Facebook Page from an existing opt-in page hosted on your blog. Then you can direct ad traffic to this tab. BOOM.

Now That I Got Some Fans, What’s Next?

The Best Ad Types on Facebook
You have unlocked the access to the most effective ad types on Facebook

As we’ve mentioned, there are four major type in our Facebook Ads toolbox. By using Engagement Ads to get more likes you have now unlocked the access to the more effective and exciting tools. Congratulations!

  1. Engagement Ads (Increase LIKEs)
  2. Promoted Posts (Engage with existing Fans and Friends of Fans)
  3. Page Post Ads (Engage with existing Fans or reach new ones)
  4. Facebook Offers (Finally get your Fans into the funnel. AKA Build a list and increase revenue)

This is where you can really utilize the social power of Facebook, to drive Fans and Friends of Fans to your best offers and build your list. To finally use Facebook to increase your business revenue.

How To Re-Engage Your Fans Using Promoted Posts

Remember we’ve discussed how only a fraction of your Fans will see your posts? This is obviously also true for the new Fans you just acquired from engagement Ads. There are two ways to get more of your Fans to see your content. You can use 5 tips to better engage with your Facebook Fans, or you can use Facebook Promoted Posts to guarantee you reach more eyeballs.

A Promoted Post is just a normal Facebook status update. The only difference is that you pay Facebook some change in order to guarantee your post some exposure. In essence, you are paying Facebook to not only surpass the 16% barrier, but also show your post to your Fans’ friends.

How does a Promoted Post look like?

A promoted post looks just like any normal Facebook post (because it is one), but there are two things to notice:

How Does A Facebook Promoted Post Look Like

 

  1. Even though it’s effectively a paid advertisement, you still get all the social buttons – Like, Comment, Share.
  2. The post will have the text “Sponsored” added to it

How to promote a post?

To promote a post, you simply click the “Promote” link under the status update that you wish to promote:

How To Promote Your Post On Facebook

If you can’t see it – you probably don’t have enough Fans yet. Go back to step #1 (Engagement Ads).

Once you click the Promote link, you will see the following screen (or a similar one, Facebook changes it all the time):

Facebook Promote A Post Screen

Not too many options here. Choose your budget, click Promote Post — and off you go!

How Do Promoted Posts Work?

  1. You choose how much you’re willing to pay, determining how many people will see the post. Price starts at $5
  2. ONLY your Fans and Friends of Fans will see your promoted post (if you follow this post, that’s can scale to hundreds of thousands of people)
  3. Normal posts rule apply: Make it engaging.
  4. Use it to: Offer awesome and valuable freebies (webinar, eBook, etc.) – that people will opt-in for. Always keep in mind that you want to turn Facebook Fans into mailing list subscribers. Other options – ask engaging questions, etc.
  5. Due to new Facebook guidelines, you cannot promote a post that includes an image that 20% or more of it is covered with text. I’ll show you exactly how that is measured in a minute
  6. When you promote, Facebook automatically creates a ‘Sponsored Story Ad Unit’ alongside with it. This means that your budget will also be used to cover these small boxes that say “John Smith Liked this post” instead of spending all of it on showing the full size post.

How To Cancel The Sponsored Stories Ad Unit

If you don’t want to pay for Sponsored Stories (I don’t), you simply need to go to the Facebook Ads Dashboard and delete it after creating your promotion. Here’s how:

1. Promote a post

2. Go to the Ads Dashboard at https://www.facebook.com/ads/manage

3. Open the relevant campaign:

Edit Promotion Campaign Of A Facebook Post

 

4. Scroll down to the bottom, locate the Sponsored Stories unit, and delete it:

Delete Sponsored Stories Unit For Promoted Facebook Posts

What’s is “The Facebook Text Policy For Ad Images In Newsfeed”

Facebook no longer allows you to promote images that contain text that covers more than 20% of the image. This applies to all Facebook Ads that appear inside the Newsfeed, including promoted posts. Here’s the exact text from the Facebook Guidelines:

Policy: Ads and sponsored stories in News Feed may not include images comprised of more than 20% text.

The Facebook Text Policy For Ad Images In Newsfeed

But how does Facebook measure this 20% text limitation?

Here is the exact algorithm Facebook uses to judge a given photo. It’s quite simple.

Let’s say this is the photo in question (I actually got banned for trying to promote it. Oops!):

How You should Limit the 20% Text in Your Facebook Ad

1. First, the Facebook algorithm divides the photo into a 5×5 mesh:

The Measurement of Facebook Text Limitation

2. Next, the Facebook algorithm marks all the squares in the mesh that include text:

How Facebook has the Algorithm for Text Limitation

3. If the algorithm finds more than 5 red squares – the photo is considered to be a guideline violation. (Notice that this applies only to images in Newsfeed Ads. You can still post such images on your Page freely).

Using Page Post Ads To Reach New Fans

Promoted posts are great but they have one problem: Only Fans and Friends of Fans can see them. If you want to reach a bigger audience you need to use Facebook Page Post Ads. The names (Page Post Ads VS Promoted Posts) confused me to no end, so I created a comparison chart to break down the differences:

promoted

How does a Page Post Ad look like?

Here’s what it looks like with a right-hand column placement:

Page Post Ad - Right Hand Column

Here’s what it looks like with Newsfeed placement:

Facebook Page Post AdLet’s deconstruct this ad:

Facebook Page Post Ad Parts_v2

Evidently, a Newsfeed Page Post Ad has quite a few components:

  1. “Sponsored” text (Red): Both the “suggested post” and “sponsored” texts are letting the user know that this post is being actively promoted.
  2. Links to the Facebook Page (Green): Both your page profile photo and name will be clickable and point the user back to your Facebook Page
  3. Engagement/social buttons (Blue): Like button (both for post and for page), Comment and Share
  4. Your real-estate (Yellow): This is the post that you chose to promote.

Let’s dig deeper on the yellow part of the ad:

Facebook Page Post Ad 3rd Party Links_v2

The ability to take people to your opt-in page is based on how you craft your post to begin with. In this example, the post includes both an attached video from YouTube (Green) and a direct link to the website (Blue). Promoting a post that sends traffic to your opt-in or offer will allow you to get a lot more out of the promotion.

One thing to consider though is the length of your post (amount of text). If your ad will be placed in the right-hand column, the text will might be trimmed, as happened with the following ad:

Page Post Ad - Right Hand Column - Text Trimmed
Page Post Ad placed on the right-hand column with its text trimmed

It’s worth mentioning that studies show that ads appearing in the Newsfeed get 6x more engagement than the right-hand column alternative, so you might decide to limit placement to Newsfeed only. Otherwise, text length is something you need to take into account.

If you want to limit the placement of your Page Post Ad to Newsfeed only you will need to use the Facebook Power Editor for Chrome. Here’s how to install it. Once installed, you can select the existing Page Post Ad (or create a new one), and locate the placement tab, that contains three options:

  1. All Facebook (both Newsfeed and right-hand column)
  2. Desktop (both Newsfeed and right-hand column but not on mobile devices)
  3. News Feed only

Setting Facebook Ad Placement Using Facebook Power Editor

How To Create A Facebook Page Posts Ad?

This is actually very, very easy. Here’s how to do it on the Facebook Ads Dashboard.

Step 1: Click on the green “Create an Ad” button.

Facebook Create An Ad

Step 2: Select the Facebook Page that contains the post you’d like to promote.

Facebook - Create Page Post Ad - Select Page v2

Step 3: Select “Promote Page Posts”

Facebook - Create Page Post Ad - Select Page Post V2

 

Step 4: Select the post you’d like to promote

Facebook - Create Page Post Ad - Select The Specific Post

 

Step 5: Remove Sponsored Stories, if you want to (not required, depends on you and your circumstances).

Facebook - Create Page Post Ad - Remove Sponsored Stories V2

 

Step 6: Choose audience – this is like any other Facebook Ad. You can target countries, ages, gender, interests and what not.

Step 7: Campaign, pricing and scheduling – again – like any other Facebook Ad.

And that’s all there is to it 🙂

How To Build A List Using Facebook Offers

Getting Fans, and getting their attention is only step one. The next big step is getting them out of Facebook and into your list. Why?

  1. Because then a 100% will be able to see your messages, and not 16%
  2. Because you will have direct access to 100%, without paying for extra promotion and regardless of they’re online hours
  3. Because when you build a list, the list is yours. No more worrying about Facebook algorithms and policy changes
  4. Because a mailing list (when utilized correctly) is considered to be the best tool to increase revenue for your business

This is why that is the next thing that I’m going to be working on, and I’ll make sure to share my finding with you.

But how?

According to Amy Porterfield we should use Facebook Offers. It allows putting ‘offers’ into your Fans’ Newsfeed. When a Fan claims an offer, his friends will see that as a story in their feed. Then the Fan’s friends will be able to claim the offer too. And when a someone claims an offer Facebook sends it to his personal email address (the one he uses to log in to Facebook). That’s right – your offer gets to go into their personal inbox. BOOM.

Things to know about Facebook Offers:

  1. You must pay in order to get your offer into your Fans’ Newsfeed. There is no “free-but-with-low-exposure” option here
  2. You can limit the amount of people who can claim the offer, and the number will appear inside the Newsfeed offer, creating URGENCY and SCARCITY
  3. As mentioned, this is a great tool to get people into webinars (and build a list while doing that) and not limited to offering paid products or services – like originally intended when Facebook launched this feature

To see how Facebook Offers work, visit the main Facebook KB article.

When applied correctly, this should be able to complete your ‘homerun’:

Understand how to use Facebook Ads -> Get Facebook Fans -> Engage With Fans -> Use Facebook Offers To Promote Your Freebies -> Build A List -> Give Great Value -> Convert To Paying Customer ->Increase Revenue.

Rinse and repeat.

How To Increase Revenue Using Your List

This is a whole big fat other subject that I’m no expert in, but here are some good resources:

On my next post I have some exciting news to share…I just hired my first full-time VA, and I’d love to tell you all about the process – from candidates, to interview, to contract, to managing tasks. I promise my best tips on this one, so stay tuned!

P.S. If you enjoyed this post, please leave me a comment so I know to come up with more content of this sort.

P.S.S. It will also help A LOT if you could click on the share/like buttons at the left side of the screen. Thank you from the bottom of my heart!

 

5 Ways To Create Engaging Content On Facebook

 engaging content

Chris Ducker has recently launched his New Business Podcast, having Amy Porterfield, the Facebook and social media expert, as his first guest. I found myself franticly taking notes while listening to this episode, so I thought it’d be a good idea to share them with you.

It’s the first time I write this kind of post, so please do let me know if you’d like to see more of these in the future.

Why Should You Care?

Let’s face some facts:

  • No matter who you are, your audience is on Facebook.
  • No matter who you are, your competitors are on Facebook.
  • Facebook is one of the first places where new audience will find you. Do you want to have a say in their first-time experience?

What’s This Thing About Fans Not Seeing My Status Updates?

Some time ago, Facebook admitted that any given post you make on your Facebook page will only appear in the Newsfeed of about 16% of your fans. There has been a lot of distress ever since — as most people (including me) expected that a 100% of their fans will see a 100% of the messages they send out. After all, these are hard earned fans!

But listening to Amy (and following a great article by Dan Raine on the Digital Marketing Magazine) , I suddenly realized something. Something that has eluded me, no matter how obvious it may be:

Facebook is not here to serve our business needs. Facebook is here to serve Jane and John Smith. The people.

“Wait a second,” I thought. “That sounds a lot like the way Ed Dale talks about Google!”.

You see, Google still lives and dies on its search engine product. We all know what happens if our website becomes irrelevant in the eyes of Google: _Its ranks drop_.

What Do Pandas Have To Do With Facebook?

Here are some news for you, sunshine: Facebook is exactly the same as Google in this way. Just like the Smiths want to see relevant results when they use Google, they want to see something interesting when they log on to Facebook.

Just like they do not want to see spammy websites on Google’s results, they do NOT want Facebook to serve them a massive shitload of self-promoting content from the tens or hundreds of pages that they follow — every single time they log in.

This is exactly what Chris has mentioned when I interviewed him for the magazine — you must switch your marketing from B2C (business to consumer/customer) to P2P – People to People.

It's about People to People (P2P)
Chris Ducker. It’s about People to People (P2P)

What Do People Welcome On Their Newsfeed?

Amy explains that people want to see content that falls into (at least) one of the 3 E’s:

  1. Entertaining
  2. Educating
  3. Empowering

That’s the kind of the content you need to produce on your Facebook page. But wait, it doesn’t end here (does it ever?).

“90% of the people that LIKE a Facebook Page will never visit it again” —Amy Porterfield

Read that again. 90% of your fans never enter your page for a 2nd time. There are two conclusions you must draw from this statistic:

  1. You need to stop wasting so much energy on making your Facebook Page look drop-dead gorgeous.
    • Your cover and profile photos are your storefront. You need them to look professional. Help people want to enter and check out the goods.
    • Don’t go bananas with tabs and all that.
  2. You must find a way to get your content into your fans’ Newsfeeds.

    • Right now, only 16% or less of them are seeing it.
    • You can bet your ass they’re not coming over to your page to look for it on their own.

How To Make Your Content Reach More Newsfeeds

Just like Google judges your website’s popularity and relevancy to determine search rankings, Facebook judges how engaging your content is to determine how many of your fans should see your posts in their Newsfeed.

Here are the factors that determine how engaging your content is considered to be, and therefore how many of your fans will see it (ordered in ascending importance):

  1. Likes
  2. Shares
  3. Comments

Obviously, one question remains: How to make my content more engaging, so that it’ll get more likes, shares, and comments?

I’m happy to report that Amy delivered 5 key-points to help out:

Image of  Amy Porterfield
Amy Porterfield

5 Ways To Make Your Content More Engaging

1: The Three E’s

As mentioned earlier. Every single post you write must be either educating, empowering or entertaining. And you should mix them. Don’t focus just on one. This is true for any kind of content, not just Facebook.

2: Make It Count

Every post you make is seen by some of your fans. Make it count for them. Don’t waste their time. Make something they want to engage with (like, share, comment).

Remember that every engagement action that your fans make will improve the EdgeRank score – the Facebook ranking that determines which stories people see on their Newsfeed.

3: Use Photos In Your Posts

You MUST. USE. PHOTOS. And use them often.

How often? Amy suggests that 90% of your posts should have a photo attached. Why?

  1. It’s the most engaging format of content on Facebook today — even more than video (read: it gets the most likes, shares and comments).
  2. It gives your posts more space in your readers’ Newsfeeds, compared to text posts (read: you get noticed).
  3. It’s much, much easier and faster to produce than video.

Now, don’t stress! Finding photos can be easy — if you make it that. You don’t need breath-taking photography; You need real life photography. Start using that iPhone camera of yours. Then, the next time you post something, take a quick look at your photo library. Find something nice and voila! Problem solved!

How far can you take this relieance on your smartphone’s camera? Pretty far:

If you don’t have a photo appropriate for your post, why not write the subject down on your whiteboard and take a snapshot of that? —Amy

4: Curate Content

It ain’t easy to create awesome posts every single day. This is where curation comes into play. Share some of the great stuff that your peers, idols, colleagues, market leaders and fans make. This is beneficial in more than one way:

  1. It gives you great content to share without having you create it all.
  2. It shows your community that you care (you spend time on finding them interesting stuff).
  3. It shows you’re on the top of your game (you know what’s going on in the niche).
  4. It creates relationships with the market leaders that you promote via curation.

Two caveats (making my humble addition to Amy’s tips) are:

  1. You should always, ALWAYS, include your own opinion. It can be as short as 1-2 sentences, or even 2-5 words. But add something of your own.
  2. Whatever you share has to be great. Don’t share “just becasue you need content and can’t be bothered with creating it today”. Share stuff because it’s great.

5: Contests and Giveaways

Amy points out that contests and giveaways are a fantastic tool for getting traction, engaging and getting to know your audience. But there are a bunch of pitfalls, so be sure to check out 6 Ways to Keep Your Facebook Contest on the Up and Up (so it Doesn’t Get Shut Down) on Amy’s blog for 3rd party tools, terms, conditions and tips.

Advanced Stuff

As you can see, Amy & Chris shared an amazing amount of great content. There’s more stuff that was covered on the episode that’s more advanced, like Facebook ads and (my favorite) “how to turn LIKEs into $$$” — but this post is already pretty long, so here’s what I’ll do:

If you liked this post, and want me to cover the more advanced subjects – let me know via the comments and I’ll make a “part 2” post soon enough.

More Info & Sources

  1. New Business Podcast – Episode #1 Show Notes (ChrisDucker.Com)
  2. Subscribe to the New Business Podcast on iTunes. I’m really excited to see more invaluable stuff coming from this podcast in the future.
  3. Amy Porterfield – Facebook Page
  4. Amy Porterfield – Homepage
  5. Chris Ducker – Homepage

Please let me know if this post was beneficial to you, and if you’d like to see more of these in the future!

 

The Mainstream Twitter Experience

Twitter just announced their recent efforts regarding consistent twitter experience to its developers.

Between all the nice words about engagement and usability, I noticed this paragraph, which according the my twitter stream – I was not the only one:

developers should not “build client apps that mimic or reproduce the mainstream Twitter consumer client experience.” …. in the coming weeks, we will be introducing stricter guidelines around how the Twitter API is used.

Delivering a consistent Twitter experience | Twitter Developers

https://dev.twitter.com/blog/delivering-consistent-twitter-experience

(via Instapaper)

What does this mean? Are excellent apps like TweetBot only reproducing the mainstream Twitter UX? Will Twitter block their API to such apps?

 

Twitter a taking another shot at forcing me and you to use their native apps and the Twitter website. Besides the fact that some 3rd party apps are by all means superior to the Twitter native app, why would twitter insist on it in the first place?

Some people say it’s the advertising business that they want to take a chunk of. I hope that’s wrong, as I won’t appreciate ads in my stream, and don’t see how exactly that’s going to fit their famous user experience.

No professional uses the Twitter website itself, so only relevant ads, if you believe this point, is mobile ads. A huge market that other social networks are also having a hard time with.

Anyway, this is a dangerous act by Twitter, many believe. Here’s another good post about it – Careful, Twitter — remember what happened to MySpace and Digg

What do you think Twitter are up to?
Sent from my iPad