Question: Twitter rebrand Article Marketers are facing even more challenges on Twitter, as if they didnt have enough already. Nearly nine months after Elon Musk took
Twitter rebrand Article
Marketers are facing even more challenges on Twitter, as if they didnt have enough already.
Nearly nine months after Elon Musk took the helm at the social media platform, the bird app is no more. Its been rebranded as X. This sudden transformation poses a significant obstacle for marketers who had been relying on the platform as part of their social media strategies.
Brian Chevalier-Jordan, CMO at National Business Capital, said he has been really put off. While his company doesnt advertise on Twitter, or X, right now, his team was considering an ad buy in the coming months as part of a broader paid social media campaign. But this latest move to rebrand hasnt exactly made him eager to advertise with the platform.
I am concerned that Musk will continue to make random changes to the platform, either alienating more casual users of the service who tend to be people my company would market to, or change the advertising tools that allow us to target users, he said. If users start to defect, it reduces the usefulness of the platform and if the tools degrade, it makes it harder to find business benefits from it.
Clearly, the speed of the rebrand took marketers like Chevalier-Jordan by surprise. Typically, such changes are introduced gradually, allowing marketers and users the chance to anticipate and adapt. However, this was not the case this time around. On Sunday, Musk announced that the platform would undergo its official renaming and rebranding to X just like hed always planned. By Monday morning,the iconic blue bird logo was scrapped and replaced across the site with an X.
In theory it makes sense. Twitters been in a state of flux since October, albeit a self-induced one, thanks to the chaos caused by its controversial owner. The rebrand seems like a clear attempt to close the chapter on that part of his ownership and open another on the next. Hes been vocal about turning Twitter into a so-called everything app like WeChat, where people are able to do all manner of things, from purchasing goods to talking to their friends. Twitter had a lot of baggage some good, some bad tied to its raison d-etre as a traditional social network. The rebrand shouldve been a moment of clarity for marketers.
So far its been anything but illuminating for marketers looking to understand what Musks plans are for his platform business. In fact, this most recent move has achieved quite the opposite effect, leaving advertisers feeling uncertain and unconvinced. Unsurprisingly, there was no prior warning or heads up of this latest (and significant) move, according to the six advertisers Digiday caught up with.
What [marketers and users] all want from Twitter is consistency and this is anything but, said James Greenfield, CEO and founder of branding agency Koto Studio. All brand and name changes need to be done with care and control, where right now this is just more chaos. Elon [Musk] is using a move fast and break things product mode with the platform brand and thats got to have people worried on a trust front.
Considering Musks track record with Twitter, this latest abrupt move only adds to those existing worries. Indeed, it further erodes any remaining trust, if there was any left at all, that marketers might have had in the platform.
Casey Jones, founder and head of marketing and finance at global digital marketing company CJ&CO, noted that a key concern for a number of marketers, himself included, is how this rebrand will affect the platforms functionality and their existing accounts.
We have invested significant resources into building our presence on Twitter, and any changes could potentially impact our engagement and reach, he said.
The same goes for marketing strategist (consultant) Tereza Litsa, who expressed huge concerns over the fact that marketers dont know anything about the rebrand, what it means and where the platform will go in the next several months.
It makes it hard to plan ahead, maintain trust and even create marketing materials, she said. For example, I need to create all assets on the website and graphics that include Twitters logo and all the copy around these. Its worrying that we dont know how this will evolve, if it could even go back to being Twitter or if the platform will stop existing. All these questions make it hard to trust the existing or new brand.
And, lets not forget, it was only a week ago that Musk admitted that Twitters ad revenue is down 50%, clearly indicating that while marketers have returned to the platform, they arent spending even half as much as they were before. The trust simply isnt there. And Twitter needs that trust given its still trying to break even.
All in all, the rebrand doesnt appear to have gone down too well. Or rather, the way that it was executed hasnt been well received. In fact, marketers feel as though the timing of the rebrand to X is simply a knee-jerk reaction to the positive press Meta has received, regarding its Twitter rival Threads.
It feels like were watching a really long, and boring tennis match between Musk and [Meta CEO Mark] Zuckerberg, of who can create the least offensive text-based platform, said Annie-Mai Hodge, director and founder of Girl Power Marketing.
But regardless of what the platform is called going forward, most users and advertisers have likely already decided whether to remain on Twitter or rather, X and put up with the uncertainty, or ditch it for somewhere else. Why? Simply because marketers still have concerns over the potential disruptions to their existing strategies and account performance. After all, the rebrand is just another sign of uncertainty on the app. And if the intent for X is to be an everything app, that leaves a lot of questions about what that means for the core business, said Stephani Estes, chief media officer at Goodway Group.
What is clear is this is the end of the text-based app as we knew it. As Jasmine Enberg, principal analyst, social media, at eMarketer, pointed out, the rebrand is a clear signal that the Twitter of the past 17 years is gone and its not coming back.
Twitter did not respond to Digidays request for comment.
From the text above please answers the following
- Whats unique about the way that Musk rebranded Twitter?
- Many people are leaving Twitter as a result of Musks management. Why is this a problem for marketers? (2 points)
- Why do marketers care so much about trust and consistency? (3 points)
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