In Japan, Twitter sees a surge of users - and revenue
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[February 28, 2018]
By Sam Nussey and David Ingram
TOKYO/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Riding a
wave of new users, improved advertising options and an embrace of video
content by users and advertisers alike, Twitter Inc's <TWTR.N> revenue
has leaped in Japan, helping lead the company to its first quarterly
profit.
Earlier this month Twitter reported that sales in Japan jumped 34
percent in the last three months of 2017, compared with a year earlier,
to $106 million.
In Japan, Twitter's success in converting users into revenue - a problem
that has vexed the social network since its founding - has raised hopes
it might lead to broader growth across the company. Investors and
analysts, however, point to Japan-specific factors that may not be
replicable elsewhere.
The company seems to be innovating at a local level instead of simply
localizing U.S. services, as is common at other tech firms, said Ryo
Sakai, a senior planner for the interactive media division at Asatsu-DK
Inc <9747.T>, Japan's third-largest advertising agency.
"I get the impression that Twitter has, in the past year or two, been
responding flexibly to advertisers' requests," he said.
At the same time, the company has attracted more eyes in Japan: user
numbers rose to about 45 million in October from about 40 million just
over a year earlier.
The reasons for that are complex, but ad industry executives say
Twitter's policy of allowing aliases and the idea of tweeting -
sometimes translated as "muttering" in Japanese - allows Japanese users
to express their opinions in a culture that tends to be outwardly
reserved.
"There is an ease to anonymity," says Motohiko Tokuriki, chief marketing
officer at Agile Media Network, which advises companies on the use of
social media.
Twitter has moved beyond text and pictures, offering rich video
advertising options and providing an alternative to rivals such as
Facebook Inc <FB.O>, says Shinya Kobori, manager for the Twitter group
at Dentsu Digital Inc, part of Japan's largest advertising agency,
Dentsu Inc <4324.T>.
The popularity of video on Twitter has been evident during the Winter
Olympics. National broadcaster NHK's video of figure skater Yuzuru
Hanyu's gold-medal-winning short program was watched more than 4 million
times and shared 125,000 times.
Facebook, which lagged home-grown rival Mixi Inc <2121.T> in the early
days of social networks, has failed to dominate Japan as it has in the
United States and Europe.
Twitter now makes $2.36 per Japanese user, compared with $5.97 per user
in the United States, according to data from the fourth quarter of 2017.
That is nearly twice the $1.24 in revenue per non-U.S. user overall.
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A 3D-printed logo for Twitter is seen in this picture illustration
on January 26, 2016. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Twitter has continued to grow its Japanese mobile user base over the last 18
months even as Facebook struggles to expand its app users numbers, data from
Nielsen shows.
And for advertisers targeting a population that has tuned out television,
Twitter offers an attractive option: around three quarters of Japanese students
over the age of 18 use it, compared with around a quarter on Facebook, according
to Nielsen.
With smartphones "overwhelmingly" used for social activities like watching
video, demand for video advertising has been "explosive" says Masahiro Ajisawa,
Japan-based senior director at Twitter Client Solutions.
Japanese consumers were late to embrace smartphones but have accelerated their
purchases, with domestic sales hitting a record high of 32 million units last
year, data from the Tokyo-based MM Research Institute shows.
Under the Twitter model, advertisers pay to push their tweets into the feeds of
users who may watch the video, retweet to their followers or click through to
the advertiser's website.
Many of the websites of traditional media lack the latest ad options, and
video-savvy net media have not taken root to the same extent in Japan as in
countries like the U.S., said Yoshiya Nakamura, executive analyst at Nielsen
Digital.Digital spending is on the rise, with the ad market for internet media
growing 15 percent to 1.5 trillion yen in 2017 - its fourth straight year of
double-digit expansion - compared with a 2.3 percent fall to 2.8 trillion yen
for traditional media, according to Dentsu.
The importance of Japan to Twitter is reflected by its choice to be one of three
countries, along with the U.S. and the U.K., chosen for Twitter's new "promote
mode," a subscription service that allows smaller business to pay to boost their
tweets.
Although Twitter expects its Japan growth to continue, it is less clear whether
the success will be replicable elsewhere.
One possibility could be the Middle East, where revenue per user remains low
despite a large number of users, said Ross Gerber, chief executive of U.S.
investment firm Gerber Kawasaki.
(Reporting by Sam Nussey and Junko Fujita in Tokyo and David Ingram in San
Francisco; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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