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On Twitter today, Web Goldenboy Charl Norman posed the question: “When will Twitter innovate?”

(Watch this video if you’re unfamiliar with Twitter)

I suspect that Charl means to ask when Twitter will add more features, such as those seen in Plurk, where you can add pictures, videos and see responses to your ‘plurk’ (equivalent to a ‘tweet’).

Let’s assume for the moment that Twitter does have ambitions to add new features. There’s one major thing holding it back: its own popularity.

You see, the moment a simple web 2.0 app like Twitter becomes immensely popular, it becomes extremely risky to change anything. Running a company that provides Internet access to thousands of users, I definitely have become more innately conservative when it comes to new features. New features have to have a really convincing reason to exist. I constantly have to force myself to keep thinking like the computer science student for whom anything is possible, rather than the businessman trying to make sure the service just keeps working.

I’d like to call this phenomenon “Feature Stiffening” (as opposed to Feature Freeze). And although I’ve sometimes experienced this emotion (because that’s what it is, really), I’ve managed to overcome it thus far by actively being aware of it when it attacks. But we only have thousands of users… not millions of users! Millions of users use Twitter for what it is, and the moment you’ve achieved that, Feature Stiffening is a lot harder to overcome.

Add to that Twitter’s well-known capacity issues and constant downtime, and you can see why innovation might be the most dangerous thing they could do.

Innovate or Die? What do you think?




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2 Responses to “Why Twitter doesn’t innovate”

I think it depends on your business. We’re building a service in a market that didn’t really exist before we started. We spend a lot of time and effort adding features, and I don’t think this will ever stop.

There’s obviously a balance between maintenance, scaling and features. Without the first two, adding features is useless. When you have a reliable system, features are a differentiator, especially when you’re innovating rather than playing catch-up.

(Report abuse)

jerith on July 9th, 2008 at 10:13 am

What Twitter has going for it is a fairly addictive basic - it is essentially narcissism meets voyeurism. A heady online mix that proves irresistible. (Well I’m certainly hooked!). I believe that forum type functionality ameliorates the lack of innovation - hence the ever growing popularity. I don’t reckon Twitter’s about to die just yet. Maybe fall over. Crack up. Splutter. Cough. But not die.

(Report abuse)

Mandy de Waal on July 22nd, 2008 at 9:46 pm

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Henk is a Computer Scientist and Internet Junkie turned Social Entrepreneur. He heads up Skyrove, Africa's largest WiFi Sharing Community. He's managed to drop out of both Med School and Mensa and in his free time he likes yapping about how solar powered robot slaves are the 'next big thing'.
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