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I had a thought on Twitter a few days ago: Could a Google acquisition of Twitter help the service scale? Or is it not an infrastructure issue but more a platform issue? Twitter has suffered from serious downtime over the last few weeks, trying to keep their service live during peak usage periods. They managed a 97% uptime during the WWDC keynote, which is’good’ by Twitters standards.

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Would a Google acquisition be healthy for Twitter? One can’t help but to think about what has happened to other startups gobbled up by the search giant. Since the acquisition of similar life streaming service Jaiku, the community has suffered from negligence on Google’s behalf, much like the Dodgeball acquisition, an acquisition Google made in 2005 and never really did anything with. Some Jaiku users have even revolted and moved over to Twitter. Google’s strategy to gobble up small startups and then do nothing with them is an interesting one.

Then again Twitter has a strong community which won’t be affected by an acquisition from any big player. Youtube also has a strong community and flourished under Google’s guidance after the historic acquisition for $1.5 billion.

Google has plenty of infrastructure that Twitter could use to minimize downtime so that it could stick to focusing on innovation. They have been slow to roll out service updates, likely because of the scaling issues. During the WWDC keynote, it even disabled some functionality to try stay up. One of Twitter’s smaller rivals, FriendFeed, has consistently announced new features and innovated on its platform.

But does Twitter want to sell? With only a couple of million dollars in funding, selling Twitter would be a nice cash out for the founders and the VCs that back them. Google has the bank to buy Twitter, which would likely come with a hefty price tag despite no real revenue model. Although I’m sure Google looked at Twitter before the Jaiku buy, seeing as Ev Williams, one of the Twitter founders, also founded Blogger, which was sold to Google as one of the first web 2.0 acquisitions.

Imagine what an interesting mash up it would be to monetize your tweets with your Google Adsense account! Google has monetized conversation well with GMail, so doing the same for Twitter could work.

Read my blog here and follow my tweets there.




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11 Responses to “Twitter downtime - Could Google help Twitter scale?”

Charl, I think it’s a good sentiment but you cannot buy your way out of everything. Plus Twitter is already being aggregated by something like Thwirl. So the audience is already consuming the tweets in another interface which they do not own to monetise. Hmmm. If I was Google and had already bought Jaiku it would not make sense to me. But hey - it’s an interesting thought none-the-less. Maybe we should by them! : )

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Elan on June 12th, 2008 at 11:24 pm

Oops - typo = embarrassing = “buy them”

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Elan on June 12th, 2008 at 11:25 pm

It would be very interesting to see what that acquisition might deliver, I am in favour of anything that can help Twitter a this stage. Regarding the monetization of Twitter, I think one needs to see the ratio between aggregation and actual site visitation.

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Dimitrio on June 13th, 2008 at 10:09 am

I think Twitter should basically “Wise-up” the entire Micro-blogging market is already innovating and moving upward, they need to get their basics right and innovate. If an acquisition will help facilitate this then so be it! :)

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Muhammad on June 13th, 2008 at 10:11 am

[…] Leader post is up - Twitter downtime - Could Google help Twitter scale? - read the full article here. I had a thought on Twitter a few days ago: Could a Google acquisition of Twitter help the service […]

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Tech Leader post is up at Charl Norman on June 13th, 2008 at 10:18 am

Makes you think, doesn’t it?

@Elan It’s true that services such as Thwirl diminish Twitters ability to be successfully monetized, but there are other ways to get money from the “eyes”. Jason Calacanis suggests 3 models that he believes could turn this into a billion dollar business (so you better hurry and buy it now!) The full post is here: http://www.calacanis.com/2008/01/02/the-three-business-models-that-make-twitter-a-billion-dollar-bus/

In my own post on Though Leader I have said that : “Another success story in the making is Twitter. It has not yet been acquired, but is reputedly well on the way to having 100-million users within the next two years. If Twitter is then able to serve one ad to each user per month, at a clean 10-cent profit, that’s $10-million in its pocket per month. If this is off by 90%, then it is still $12-million a year.”
http://www.thoughtleader.co.za/evedmochowska/2008/03/18/online-millions-the-advertising-model/

Whatever they decide to do, though, they should do it quickly. I am a big fan of twitter, and would hate to see it go away, but we are living in the innovation age, and the performance gap will soon be filled by someone else. Speed is of the essence, or we will all be migrating somewhere.

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Eve Dmochowska on June 13th, 2008 at 10:51 am

[…] blog post is from my Tech Leader […]

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Could Google help Twitter scale? on June 15th, 2008 at 1:37 pm

[…] blog post is from my Tech Leader […]

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Back in April, Jaiku announced its move to the Google App Engine. At the end of May, the App Engine move was making progress. Jaiku was down Jun 8th and May 12th with messages about having too much traffic for the servers to handle (but without a status page, how do we know?). With 1/10th the usage of Twitter, Jaiku goes down because of not enough capacity? I hope they make more progress with App Engine.

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ez on June 16th, 2008 at 11:05 pm

[…] Talk was based on the essence of business blogging Miguel blogged about many moons ago and a topic mentioned mentioned during my previous talk at WordPress Cape Town meetup 3. The Twitter and all it’s friends subtitle bit plays on the new Coldplay Album title: Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends stirring (yes, with that spoon) at twitter’s downtime issues (possible solution) […]

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[…] web 2.0 “wonder” [you wonder whether it will ever work properly] has found itself in. Charl Norman had a decent suggestion for the M&A guys over at Google recently that could help solve these problems, but it’s unlikely that that would ever […]

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Charl Norman is the founder of Blue World Communities (BWCOM.co.za), which includes some of South Africas fastest growing and most interesting social media portals including BlueWorld.co.za and ZoopedUp.com.

Blue World Communities has been in the news recently since theyve just been snapped up by Naspers.

Charl is 23 years old, and is gaining a steady reputation as an engaging public speaker. Charl has been featured as a guest lecturer on the UCT Graduate School of Business Nomadic Marketing Course; and is also the author of two highly successful blogs, Carblog.co.za (ranked 6th on Amatomu) and Bandwidthblog.com, which was nominated for best Tech blog at the SA Blog Awards.
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