Talk of extending Twitter's character limit caused a bit of a tweet storm on Tuesday after Re/code
reported that the San Francisco-based company is considering changing
the 140-character model to as long as 10,000 characters. Twitter CEO
Jack Dorsey himself winked and nodded at the rumors with a long-form tweet of his own, seemingly confirming that major change is afoot.
We asked agency executives to weigh in on the potential impact more
characters could have on brands. The general reaction skewed positive
among those we asked, though there were dissenters.
"It comes across as a desperate move that strays from everything the
company is built on," said Luke Yun, a social strategist at 72andSunny.
"It's true that brands may be able to target users better when they
tweet with more characters. It's also true that there's some fun to be
had with 140-character brand tweets—think emojis, ASCII art, tags. But
at the end of the day, the user experience may take a hit. And that's a
loss for everyone involved."
At the same time, Laura Chavoen, director of social media at Grey New
York, said Twitter users have already been finding ways to get around
the current limit with screenshots and links.
"This change will open the platform to new users and will power new
strategies, enabling a richer experience within the channel," Chavoen
said. "I am optimistic that this proactive move will widen the audience
and, in conjunction with the launch of the 'non-logged-in' experience,
will fundamentally change the way Twitter is used."
1. Big pharma can find its voice
According to Noah Mallin, head of social at MEC North America, the move
could make it easier for highly regulated industries to meet disclosure
requirements on the platform. That could be a big win for the
pharmaceutical, alcohol and healthcare industries, and for financial
institutions.
2. A platform to pontificate
While longer Twitter wouldn't prevent people from going on the
occasional tweet storm—even Dorsey pointed out he doesn't plan to stop
those—it could create a better option for those who want to post lengthy
memos. That could be good for political parties that want to post their
platforms or industry leaders who want to write more all at once. It
could also work well for people who want to give lengthy replies to
other people's tweets to show their side of an argument.
"Twitter could become a place for more in-depth blogging and thought
leadership from executives, similar to LinkedIn and Medium," Mallin
said.
3. Better capabilities for Twitter search and SEO
More characters will create more opportunities for searching within the
platform, but it will also provide new opportunities for marketers to
harness the power of Google. It's been less than a year since Google began testing tweets in mobile search results, but 9,860 more characters could exponentially increase the potential of SEO.
"The biggest reason they are making the shift is not just for user
behavior—to me, it is to increase the platform's capabilities in
search," said Tom Edwards, chief digital officer of agency business at
Epsilon. "With more content, it will be about getting more insights on
individual behavior and other ad opportunities. This change allows to
search more content, signal of users and increase the platform's
targeting ability."
4. Long-form content means more time with consumers
Social-media engagement has always been important for brands. If
marketers can get consumers to devour more copy, it stands to reason
that Twitter could drive more efficacy—namely sales.
"Allowing brands to reach audiences with more content on Twitter will
only result in more time spent with brands," said Heat social media
director Kirby Todd. "Expanding the character count gives brands more of
an opportunity to build connections with their audiences while giving
consumers more social real estate within the platform."
5. Fewer reasons to link off-channel
Topher Burns, group director of distribution strategy at Deep Focus,
said more characters means more options for content creation. He said,
"Now, instead of linking off-channel, you can imagine being able to
offer richer experiences on-platform, which data has consistently proved
increases engagement—DIY tutorials, recipes, product origin stories,
even consumer reviews tagged with the profile of the reviewer."
6. TL;DR Twitter
Depending on how Twitter would set up capabilities for longer tweets,
the move could provide a way for brands to have a combination of short-
and long-form content. One could imagine a button for TL;DR (Internet
slang for "too long; didn't read") that gives consumers options for what
kind of branded content they want to look at.
"Brands will have to become familiar with the concept of TL;DR—just
because you can go long doesn't mean you shouldn't be pithy," Mallin
said.
No comments:
Post a Comment