The Power of 280 Characters - podcast episode cover

The Power of 280 Characters

Dec 14, 20175 min
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Transcript

Speaker 1

Publishing tools. Social Flow has discovered that people are liking and retweeting longer Twitter messages more frequently than the traditional one forty character limit versions. I'm Jonathan Strickland and this is tech stuff Daily. Earlier in Twitter shook things up by doubling the character limit users have when they compose their messages. Traditionally, once you hit one characters, that was it. But Twitter's changement, you suddenly had an additional one forty

characters to make your point. It might not be the great American novel, but suddenly users didn't need to struggle to find a short synonym for words like ginormous. Twitter rolled out the change gradually. In November, the company announced that this switch to characters would become a global feature almost It turns out that in the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean versions of Twitter, you'll still need to express your

ideas in one forty characters or fewer. The character limit wasn't just an arbitrary number to begin with, at least not completely. Twitter's origins are tied to s m S text messages. SMS stands for Short Message Service, and it really just means text message, like the type you can send on a typical cell phone. In the nineties, standardization bodies determined that the maximum length of an SMS message should be one hundred sixty characters. Twitter followed suit, setting

twenty of those characters aside for Twitter user handles. Originally, Twitter messages were all sent as SMS messages. It was only later with desktop clients and smartphone applications that the SMS limitations began to become more of a problem. Twitter had been addressing this in little ways over the years, incorporating tools like u r L shorteners and other strategies to take some of the sting out of finding the right way to get your point across in limited space,

but then the expansion into two characters. Some people had a negative reaction to this, bemoaning what they perceived to be an oncoming era of low quacious tweets filling up their screens, I suppose, but according to Social Flows research, people have been responding positively to the change in policy.

The company states that between November twenty nine and December sixth, two thousand, seventeen, Twitter users would retweet messages below the old onety limit about thirteen point seven one times on average. For the longer messages, the number was closer to twenty six point five two times, almost twice as frequently. Likes the indication that you think of particular tweet is pretty keen, but you don't feel the need to repeat it necessarily

followed a similar pattern. Shorter messages were liked on average twenty nine point nine six times, longer ones fifty point to eight times. At first, people weren't using those extra characters very frequently. According to Twitter, only five sent of tweets during their test period actually exceeded one characters. Only

two percent got as high as one nine characters. The company used those facts to reassure Twitter users that their experience reading tweets would not really change all that remarkably. I suppose I should take this as an opportunity to apologize to my own Twitter followers, as I am a wordy fellow and I have taken great joy in rounding out those two characters more than once. If you want proof,

just go to Twitter and follow at John Strickland. While the increase and engagement is a good thing, it hasn't stopped some analysts from viewing Twitter with a cautious eye. The Pew Research Center conducted a survey to find out which age groups will gravitate to various social media platforms. Millennials, the largest generation in the United States, make up about

thirty six percent of Twitter's users. That might sound like a lot, but a glance over at Instagram shows that sixty percent of their users fall into the ages of eighteen to twenty nine years old. Because of this and other factors, many tech analysts feel that Twitter is living on borrowed time. It's hard to argue that Twitter is useless. Millions of people still rely on this service daily, but it's struggled to generate revenue and engage with younger customers.

Isn't a great sign to hear more about the Twitter story, as well as deep dives on all the major social media platforms. Check out the tech Stuff podcast. In this long form show, I explore technologies, companies, and important people in greater detail. It publishes on Wednesdays and Fridays. I'll see you again soon.

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