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Twitter versus Facebook: How Twitter is trying to catch up to what Facebook has achieved

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To tweet on Twitter or post a status on Facebook?

OK, to be fair, these two things aren’t mutually exclusive, as any social media marketer would tell you. Choosing between Twitter and Facebook (and any other social platform) really depends upon the audience you’re trying to reach, the metrics you’re trying to hit, and the goals you’re trying to achieve.

Still, there’s no denying there’s some long-standing rivalry between Twitter and Facebook, with Twitter executives adamant that we shouldn’t compare the two networks. That makes sense, to a certain extent, as the two platforms are out to achieve different things. Yet this year, they may be overlapping in subtle ways that will affect everyone – and that includes marketers, brands, developers, and their users, according to a story in Fast Company. 

In a long, in-depth analysis of Twitter and Facebook, Fast Company’s J.J. McCorvey and Nicole Laporte looked at how they stacked up against each other – and in most of the measurements that count, it would appear that Facebook is the heavyweight. It has more users, more revenue, more profits, and a larger market cap than Twitter, while Twitter’s main asset seems to be its claim to cool through its ties to big names in entertainment.

Here’s a quick rundown of how the two compare:

By contrast, Facebook performs a lot better with movies. Live-tweeting a movie is awkward, but performing campaigns on Facebook tends to be a good approach for marketers looking to drum up buzz ahead of a movie launch with things like trailer debuts. Still, once one of these companies figures out how to share revenue with movie studios, it could easily dominate the other in this space.

For Twitter, the big challenge will be to make its service more user-friendly. So far, it’s done that by giving first-time users a checklist of the topics they’re interested in, as well as allowing them to upload their own contacts. That’s not too earth-shattering, but Twitter has also announced it’ll show users tweets that are tailored to their interests. That’s a move that’s generated some controversy among long-time users,  as they argue the power of Twitter is to see all tweets in real-time, giving them news and opinions as raw, unfiltered content. So even as Twitter tries to attract new users, it has to be careful to not alienate its current ones.

Twitter has created its own mobile developers’ tool with the goal of getting developers to build and grow apps on its platform. Its platform is called Fabric, and it allows developers to tap into Twitter’s mobile advertising platform to display ads inside their apps. It also them to promote their apps on Twitter’s platform, showing Twitter is making efforts to become both  more developer-friendly, and hence, more mobile-friendly. Still, Twitter needs to do more if it wants to catch up with what Facebook has already achieved.

In short, Twitter does have some reasons to be a bit behind Facebook. After all, Facebook is roughly two years older, and it’s done a better job of monetizing its offerings to marketers and advertisers. Still, that doesn’t mean we should count Twitter out – in its early stages, Facebook also had to work hard to prove itself to its investors and to its shareholders. Twitter will need to do the same if it wants to compete.

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