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Saturday, September 14, 2013

Twitter vs. Facebook: A Tale of Two Sites

Twitter was created as a side project in 2006, two years after Facebook got its start in a Harvard dorm room.Dado Ruvic/ReutersTwitter was created as a side project in 2006, two years after Facebook got its start in a Harvard dorm room.
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • GOOGLE+
  • SAVE
  • E-MAIL
  • SHARE
  • PRINT
All eyes are on Twitter as the company prepares for a highly anticipatedinitial public offering of stock. Twitter’s announcement on Thursday that the company had filed paperwork with regulators to eventually sell shares  immediately had analysts and potential shareholders wondering how the company would fare after Facebook’s public offering last year, which was turbulent, to say the least.
But how alike are the two social networks? Here’s a quick
comparison.
Back Story: Twitter was created as a side project in 2006 as a way to share short, succinct messages with a small group of friends. Facebook, as has been told many times, got its start in a Harvard dorm room in 2004. It initially aimed to let people create personal profiles to share photos and messages with a wide network of friends.
Purpose: Twitter functions as a real-time news, entertainment and information network, tapping into the ideas and preoccupations of people who live online and the events that affect them. Facebook, on the other hand, primarily functions as the yellow pages for the Internet.
Network: Twitter has more than 200 million monthly active users, according to memos shared with staff members. Facebook has more than a billion.
Finances: By its own estimates, Twitter was profitable in December of last year and generated more than $100 million in revenue in the final quarter of 2012, according to numbers in an e-mail shared among members of its staff. These numbers could not be independently verified. Twitter is expected to post around $600 million in revenue this year and close to $1 billion next year, according to internal projections and estimates by the research firm eMarketer. Facebook reported that it generated $5 billion in revenue in 2012.
Revenue Sources: Both Twitter and Facebook rely heavily on a variety of advertising strategies, and mobile advertising in particular. Facebook, however, also makes money from games and other apps built on top of its platform, and it is  expected to introduce ads soon on Instagram, the company’s photo app.

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