
Twitter
based the forecasts on expected advertising demand, said the people,
who asked not to be identified because the numbers are private. The San
Francisco-based company could change or miss the forecasts, the people
said.
Demand
for advertising aimed at Twitter’s more than 140 million users is
benefiting the company. Researchers at EMarketer Inc. have said that.. in
2014, Twitter will reach $540 million in ad sales, which make up
virtually all of its revenue, up from $139.5 million last year. Even so,
it will take Twitter longer to generate $1 billion than bigger
competitors Facebook Inc. (FB) and Google Inc. (GOOG)
“The
marketers who have used Twitter’s advertising opportunities have been
pleased,” said Nate Elliott, an analyst with Forrester Research Inc.
(FORR) in New York. “Twitter’s going to be able to push forward and
continue to make more money from it.”
Google
crossed the $1 billion threshold five years after its founding, while
Facebook, which sold shares in an initial public offering last month,
achieved that goal six years after it got started. Founded in 2006,
Twitter will be eight years old in 2014.
Overseas Expansion
Twitter
has stepped up a campaign to induce marketers to devote more of their
ad budgets to its service, which lets users post messages of no more
than 140 characters to followers. Twitter, which unveiled its first ad
offering in 2010, started a self-service platform this year to reach
more small businesses. It also recently expanded mobile-ad services.
Companies
need to spend money on Twitter to ensure their messages are seen, said
Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst at San Mateo, California-based Altimeter
Group. “Because all of the brands are jumping in and spewing content,
there’s a deafening noise. So, the one way to cut across that is to
advertise and make your content shine higher.”
Under
Chief Executive Officer Dick Costolo, Twitter is also working to expand
internationally, including in Japan, to lessen its reliance on the U.S.
market. The percentage of revenue Twitter earns from the U.S. will fall
to 83 percent in 2014 from about 90 percent this year, researcher
EMarketer estimated in January.By AGENCIES
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