In its run-up to IPO, Twitter has built ad tools for geotargeting and retargeting as well as ad products for the music industry and the TV industry. It’s built an Ads API for partners, and even bought an ad exchange to broaden access to its massive 500 million tweets per day inventory.
Twitter better hope those ads work, because it’s pretty clear that digital word of mouth on the newsy social network isn’t functioning all that well — at least in terms of generating commerce. In fact, actual sales from tweets are so low, growth hacker consultancy Curebit is taking Twitter sharing out of the options on its clients’ sites.
See also: Why the half-life of a Pinterest pin is thousands of times longer than a tweet or Facebook post
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“As compared to Twitter, Facebook is responsible for 10 times the number of shares, 20 times the amount of site traffic, and 30 times the number of new customers acquired,” Curebit vice-president Brad Kam told me today. “Twitter is simply not as relevant for commerce.”
Curebit is a three-year-old Y Combinator startup focused on high-level growth hacking for clients like Tom’s Shoes, Sephora, Bonobos, and more. The company helps companies maximize organic growth via customer sharing, and via its “millions of customer shares” can see what people are sharing — and what the value of those shares are in terms of impressions, clicks, and purchases.
There’s a reason why Twitter doesn’t drive commerce, Curebit says, and it has everything to do with the nature of the network itself.
Curebit measures the value of social sharing, and the problem is not that posts on Twitter don’t generate any revenue at all. The problem is that it happens so little. Holding all else constant, Curebit says, Facebook shares generate 30 percent more new customer sales than Twitter. That’s not a big edge, but the massive difference is in volume of shares, which is ten times greater.
35 percent of the shares via Curebit’s platform are via Facebook, versus just 3.2 percent via Twitter. That translates into 56 percent of site traffic via Facebook compared to 3.2 percent via Twitter. More importantly, however, in terms of actual customers, 30 percent are coming via Facebook while just .9 percent are coming in via Twitter. And most importantly, 19.3 percent of sales are due to Facebook, compared to just 1.5 percent via Twitter.
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Those are big differences, and they’re bigger than just the varying size of Facebook and Twitter as platforms.
This isn’t something new — social commerce has had its detractors for years — and Twitter has long trailed the older and more-established Facebook in advertiser and brand monetization, as Facebook fans have been valued as high as $1,613.
But the precise numbers are still fairly shocking, and are something that potential Twitter investors have to consider carefully as the Twitter IPO approaches.
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