Twitter has unveiled plans to pump up the globally popular one-to-many messaging service with a $1-billion stock market debut.
The initial public offering (IPO) is expected to be the most sought-after since Facebook in May 2012, a listing that faced numerous glitches on the Nasdaq and which saw the company’s share price slump before recovering this year.
Twitter outlined its plans in filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, providing the first public insights into the San Francisco-based company that has rocketed to Internet stardom since its launch in 2006.
“Social media is red hot,” said Internet analyst Lou Kerner.
“Twitter is front and centre benefiting from market enthusiasm for all things social, and remarkably strong metrics.”
Twitter users
In the regulatory filing, Twitter disclosed that it had 218 million active users as of June 30 in a 44 per cent increase from the same point a year earlier. It reported that it lost almost $80 million on nearly $317 million in revenue in 2012.
Twitter brought in $253.6 million in revenue in the first half of this year, but remained in the red with a loss of about $69 million, the company said in the filing.
Some noted that Twitter would be close to breaking even this year if it hadn’t spent slightly more than $67 million on social television analytics firm BlueFin Labs.
Capital-raising move
Forrester analyst Zachary Reiss-Davis sees the capital-raising move by Twitter as a sign the company is intent on improving ways people enjoy content on its platform and how marketers connect with users.
“Users should be happy about this,” Reiss-Davis said.
“It looks like Twitter is looking at how to enrich the experience and it understands that to build a successful service they have to create something people like and want to come back to and spend time on.”
A challenge for Twitter will be finding money making advertising methods that take advantage of the real-time, and short-lasting, nature of posts at the service while not annoying users.
“Things on Twitter have very short shelf lives, and advertisers are going to have to adapt to that,” the analyst said.
He expected marketing on Twitter to become integrated with other media such as television viewing in what are referred to as “second-screen” experiences in which people delve into tweets while watching shows.
The public version of the IPO filing came three weeks after Twitter filed a confidential document, taking advantage of a recent law designed to help emerging companies.