Re: twitter anyone?
The big problem with Twitter is that there is no revenue model there. Twitter is operating on venture capital now, and hasn't figured out any way to monetize what they do. They pay for Web bandwidth and for SMS messages every time somebody Tweets. But no money is coming in.
The plan was to make something compelling and then sell it to Google or Facebook. Both passed on Twitter. With every update, Facebook is becoming more Twitter-like.
The clock is ticking on Twitter. There's no buyer on the horizon. Either they'll start throwing advertisements into people's Twitter streams, which will make people mad (imagine getting a bunch of unsolicited ads on your phone via Twitter) or they'll start charging a subscription fee. Either way, it'll drive people away from the service.
Meanwhile, Facebook is adding gazillions of users every day, and making bags of money. If I was a beat writer covering a D1 program, I'd put up a Facebook page (not a personal site, but a page dedicated to your coverage) and link it to my Twitter feed. That's the trifecta of social networking: Use Twitter and Facebook to drive people back to your revenue-generating site (in this case, TV's blog and the Argus Leader Web site).
Originally posted by NoVaJack
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The plan was to make something compelling and then sell it to Google or Facebook. Both passed on Twitter. With every update, Facebook is becoming more Twitter-like.
The clock is ticking on Twitter. There's no buyer on the horizon. Either they'll start throwing advertisements into people's Twitter streams, which will make people mad (imagine getting a bunch of unsolicited ads on your phone via Twitter) or they'll start charging a subscription fee. Either way, it'll drive people away from the service.
Meanwhile, Facebook is adding gazillions of users every day, and making bags of money. If I was a beat writer covering a D1 program, I'd put up a Facebook page (not a personal site, but a page dedicated to your coverage) and link it to my Twitter feed. That's the trifecta of social networking: Use Twitter and Facebook to drive people back to your revenue-generating site (in this case, TV's blog and the Argus Leader Web site).
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