Here’s Twitter’s Answer to Banner Ads

Twitter just started selling banner ads. Sort of.

This afternoon the social network tweaked its timelines to include pictures and Vine videos “front and center” in tweets, including paid ones created and promoted by brands.

That might sound like a small update, but it’s potentially a huge one for advertisers. It will afford brands the opportunity to include images and videos in their promoted tweets which users won’t be able to avoid. Brands can essentially buy display advertising on Twitter now.

nokia tweet

With its IPO looming, Twitter is giving advertisers what they want, and that’s “high-impact” visual ad formats.

Twitter is undergoing a crash course in how the ad world works. When it first introduced “promoted tweets” in 2011, it claimed it would do things differently, insisting its “promoted tweets” were simply organic messages that were given added visibility. With this new capability, Twitter is getting closer to giving advertisers typical display ad units, even if they’re dressed up as tweets. The images in promoted tweets will display on both mobile and desktop devices, but they’re not standard banner ad sizes, meaning creative will have to be developed specifically for Twitter.

The move is a similar to the recognition Facebook had that it would need to drop its insistence of changing advertising in favor of catering to how the world of media works now.

In September, MRY’s chief distribution officer, Jeff Melton, told Digiday his agency was thirsting for more “creative opportunities.” Twitter’s answer is that the promoted tweet is the envelope; what advertisers put inside that envelope is up to them.

The introduction of images and video to promoted tweets means advertisers will likely focus their attention on the inside of the envelope, as opposed to the 140 characters of text they can also include. It’s easy to see how a promoted tweet with rich, compelling visual content could outperform one without.

Twitter is also gearing up for its IPO, of course, and eager to show potential investors that it has what it takes to attract the attention of big brand advertisers. Updates like this one will help.

https://digiday.com/?p=54154

More in Media

Walmart rolls out a self-serve, supplier-driven insights connectors

The retail giant paired its insights unit Luminate with Walmart Connect to help suppliers optimize for customer consumption, just in time for the holidays, explained the company’s CRO Seth Dallaire.

Research Briefing: BuzzFeed pivots business to AI media and tech as publishers increase use of AI

In this week’s Digiday+ Research Briefing, we examine BuzzFeed’s plans to pivot the business to an AI-driven tech and media company, how marketers’ use of X and ad spending has dropped dramatically, and how agency executives are fed up with Meta’s ad platform bugs and overcharges, as seen in recent data from Digiday+ Research.

Media Briefing: Q1 is done and publishers’ ad revenue is doing ‘fine’

Despite the hope that 2024 would be a turning point for publishers’ advertising businesses, the first quarter of the year proved to be a mixed bag, according to three publishers.