Insider Intelligence,the well-respected data-research group,sees a very different picture. “Many big agencies still haven’t advised clients to end their pause[on advertising with the company],” wrote analyst Jasmine Enberg. “We expect Twitter’s worldwide ad revenues to plummet by 27.9 per cent this year as advertisers continue to pull back spending.”
Enberg noted research from digital-economy research shop Sensor Tower that said spending by Twitter’s top 10 advertisers — which include Amazon,IBM,and Coca-Cola — had fallen 89 per cent in February and March 2023 compared with the pre-Musk September to October 2022. The recently revamped paid verification service,Twitter Blue,won’t come close to making up the shortfall.
This is not necessarily all Musk’s fault,Enberg rightly points out. Twitter’s decreasing relevance for much of the population — those who don’t want a constant timeline of doom and gloom — has had advertisers hesitating for a while now. Uncivilised behaviour on Twitter predated — but accelerated with — the rise of Donald Trump. Musk’s contribution has been to ultimately and inexplicably say “more of that,please”,reinstating some of the worst offenders.
“Twitter is ‘troll heaven,’” Musk said after the BBC interview,when the discussion continued on Twitter Spaces,with Musk inviting a few acolytes who were eager to chat.
One of them,Ian Miles Cheong,a right-wing social media figure,described the appeal of Twitter as thus:“When you tweet a celebrity,there’s pretty good chance they’ll read it and they get irritated by it,and then say you’re trolling them,which is what I do. It’s good,it’s fun having that reaction. It’s like playing a video game but better.”
“Yeah,totally. Exactly,” Musk agreed.