Twitter grabs average
243,000 viewers in NFL livestream debut
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[September 17, 2016]
By Amy Tennery and Jessica Toonkel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Twitter Inc attracted
an average of 243,000 viewers to Thursday's National Football League
livestream of the New York Jets triumph over the Buffalo Bills, the
first time the social media platform has broadcast an NFL game.
The event drew mostly praise from Twitter users and media experts have
said the NFL deal helps Twitter maintain its position as a venue for
live video.
Still, the Twitter audience was only a fraction of the average of 15.7
million people watching across television and digital platforms,
according to NFL data of the game, which the Jets won, 37-31.
Twitter’s arrangement with the NFL comes as sports fans increasingly
rely on the internet to watch video at the expense of traditional cable
and satellite connections.
The microblogging platform has struggled with user growth and
advertising competition, and livestreaming the games gives it a new
avenue to attract users as it tries to catch up with rivals such as
Facebook Inc.
Anheuser-Busch InBev SA <ABI.BR, Ford Motor Co, Bank of America Corp and
Verizon Communications were among the brands that ran video ads during
the game's livestream.
The deal with the NFL has the potential to reignite brands’ interest in
working more with Twitter after it has had a bumpy ride over the past
several months, said Victor Pineiro, senior vice president, social media
at Big Spaceship, a Brooklyn, New York-based digital ad agency.
“We still see a big role for it,” he said.
For example, there is an opportunity for brands to be part of the
conversation around the games through sponsored tweets and other means,
said Edithann Ramey, vice president, marketing for Chili's Grill and
Bar, a Dallas-based restaurant chain.
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People holding mobile phones are silhouetted against a backdrop
projected with the Twitter logo in this illustration picture taken
in Warsaw September 27, 2013. REUTERS/Kacper
Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
"It's very intriguing to us in terms of the number of impression they bring and
ways we can jump in and be part of the conversation," Ramey said.
Twitter is the second tech company to livestream an NFL game. In October, Yahoo
Inc livestreamed a game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Buffalo Bills
in London, which attracted an average of 2.36 million viewers, versus the
243,000 in the Twitter game.
About 15.2 million viewers watched at least part of the game on Yahoo, while a
total of 2.3 million people tuned into Thursday's game or pregame show on
Twitter for at least three seconds, according to the NFL.
The Yahoo game, however, was not broadcast on U.S. TV nationwide and in some
cases, the stream automatically started playing on Yahoo websites.
(Reporting By Amy Tennery and Jessica Toonkel in New York; Editing by Peter
Henderson and Alan Crosby)
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