Twitter Ads Self-Serve Platform Opens to All U.S. Users

Twitter's self-serve ad platform is now available to all U.S. users, rather than just on an invitation-only basis. The social media platform has also added enhancements designed to help advertisers better analyze and manage their ad campaigns.

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May 01, 2013 Categories

twitter-bird-new-june2012Twitter’s self-serve ad platform is now available to all U.S. users, rather than just on an invitation-only basis.

The social media platform has also added enhancements designed to help advertisers better analyze and manage their ad campaigns.

In an online statement, Twitter said it has widened reporting on user engagement with Promoted Tweets – the sponsored tweets that appear at the top of its news feed – to include not just paid media but also earned media, or those that are voluntarily retweeted or commented on by other Twitter users.

“This change gives marketers more complete insight into the impact Promoted Tweets have in driving engagement and exposure on Twitter,” the company said.

Twitter also made changes in its ads center that it claims gives advertisers more detail on audience segments, allowing them to view their audience, for example, by device, location, gender, and interest.

Twitter has been slowly phasing in Promoted Tweets and Promoted Accounts over the past few years, and in March announced the availability of a self-serve ad platform to a limited number of companies by invitation only. For some marketers, the wider availability of Twitter’s ad platform comes none too soon.

“People have been salivating for an ad platform on Twitter for quite a while. If they had launched this one or two years ago, it would have been rolling along by now,” says Maciej Fita, SEO director at Brandignity, a Naples, Florida-based agency that helps small-to-medium-sized companies with digital marketing efforts.

Fita, who said a few of his clients have tried out the platform in beta, welcomed the new analytics abilities but said that Twitter still had a long way to go in terms of offering a mature ad platform.

“I don’t think the conversion tracking is that good and maneuvering though the ad platform is somewhat confusing,” he said, noting that it would take Twitter a while to approach the level of Google AdWords or Facebook in allowing companies to see precisely where conversions were coming from.

This article was originally published on ClickZ.

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