Tag: Twitter Amplify

  • SPNI, Twitter join hands to bring premium video content to fans

    SPNI, Twitter join hands to bring premium video content to fans

    Mumbai: Twitter and Sony Pictures Networks India (SPNI) are coming together to bring the best of sporting action to Twitter audiences for India’s cricket tours with Sri Lanka and England starting from 18 July.

    With the sports channels of SPNI’s live coverage of the tours on Twitter, cricket fans will be able to consume real-time video highlights on their timeline. These video highlights, as well as Twitter Moments, will be available for fans across various cricket formats giving them an unparalleled experience, the platform said in a statement on Thursday.

    With this partnership, Twitter Amplify will enable brands to align their ads via pre-rolls or promoted videos to reach sports audiences in real-time, it added.

    “While the sports experience has changed in recent times, the roar of sports fans on Twitter is louder than ever,” said Twitter India’s head-global content partnerships, Amrita Tripathi. “Conversations around cricket leagues in 2020 increased by 23% when compared to those in 2019 – which in itself was a record-breaker with 27 million Tweets. We are delighted to partner with Sony to bring in-match premium cricket video content to people on Twitter in India for the very first time, building on a promising content partnership with one of the top sports broadcasters in the region.”

    “We are excited to partner with Twitter and take our viewer engagement to the next level,” said SPNI’s head-growth and monetisation, digital business, Manish Aggarwal. “It is a pleasure to come together and be able to reach out to cricket enthusiasts with video highlights. Since it is a new and refreshing phenomenon, the viewers will now have one more platform to share/discuss and express their views on the matches.”

    Through the course of this year, Twitter will bring a range of different cricket content from partners, like the sports channels of SPNI, including Twitter Spaces, and behind-the-scenes action with the Twitter #BlueRoom for the upcoming World Cup series and India vs Australia women’s series. 

  • Twitter India ropes in Viral Jani to head TV affairs

    Twitter India ropes in Viral Jani to head TV affairs

    MUMBAI: Twitter India has appointed Viral Jani as head of TV partnerships. He will be based at the company’s Mumbai office. As part of his new role, Jani will work closely with the complete TV ecosystem of broadcasters, production houses and audience measurement systems to make Twitter the second screen to TV in India.

     

    His main responsibility will be to forge strategic partnerships with broadcasters to help channels amplify their message, drive more viewers, and generate more user engagement with their content on Twitter. 

     

    Jani aims to lead this social TV movement in India by bringing the best content from TV channels to Twitter for live, public conversations, while enabling Twitter as an incredible video and visual-driven storytelling platform to drive tune-in and audience engagement for TV channels.

     

    Moving forward, Jani is keen to position Twitter as the largest virtual couch for viewing TV content in India, and facilitate broadcasters to use the full suite of Twitter’s products such as Twitter native video, Twitter Amplify, Vine, Periscope, SnappyTV and TV analytics. 

     

    Twitter Asia Pacific and Middle East media vice president Rishi Jaitly said, “Twitter is the ultimate companion to television and we have invested considerable time and effort in partnerships with TV broadcasters worldwide to ensure they are able to amplify the live, public conversations about their shows on our platform. In his new role, Viral will expand Twitter’s leadership and footprint in the social TV market in India, prioritising TV partners that drive audience engagement and growth.”

     

    Jani added, “Television is one of the largest conversation generators on Twitter, and viewers are far more engaged when they are watching TV and tweeting at the same time. Twitter is also where viewers discover great TV content that is being watched now, from live events to scripted shows to reality TV. I’m thrilled to join the team at this exciting time for Twitter in India.”

  • Twitter to launch ‘Twitter TV Ratings’ worldwide

    Twitter to launch ‘Twitter TV Ratings’ worldwide

    CANNES: It is a big development for broadcasters around the globe. Social networking site Twitter had earlier this year launched ‘Twitter TV Ratings’ in the US. The network will slowly launch it in the UK, Italy and Australia.

     

    “We will be rolling it out across the world,” said Twitter researcher Anjali Midha during a presentation in Cannes at the ongoing MIPCOM 2014.

     

    With this, the Twitter team wants to put the power of Twitter in the hands of the broadcasters, so that they know how the programmes are doing day after day or week after week and to also find out the subsequent reach from that activity. “The reason we know that reach is important is because we see that Twitter really drives live ratings,” added Midha. 

     

    Twitter helps broadcasters know about live viewing as well as week after week viewing. “Twitter is conversational, it is live, it is public, it is the global town square. The audience takes the show and makes it their own, it is distributed, it permeates the entire culture,” said Twitter TV creative lead Fred Graver.

     

    Throwing some statistics, Graver said that Twitter conversations are shared with 271 million users, 78 per cent of whom are on mobile and “we process 500 million tweets a day, which is 60,000 tweets a second,” he informed.  

     

    According to him, 95 per cent of public conversation happens on Twitter. What’s interesting is that 70 per cent of tweets are created and consumed during the broadcast of a show. “People who see those tweets when it is live, say they want to watch the programme, either then or later online. We are amazed by the way our partners adapt the platform,” he added.

     

    He further went on to give examples of broadcasters who are using Twitter. “In the past one week, we have seen Channel 7 putting tweets inside promotions, Channel 1 in Russia putting hashtags and handles in news broadcast. There is a live musical jukebox in India that is powered by Twitter.”

     

    The key to the social media platform is data, which proves the value of audience and how they are valuable to advertisers. In the session on ‘TVxTwitter’, another point that was touched was money. “A lot of the money is drifting away to digital from TV. It is a fact. Twitter has devised an ‘Amplify’ programme that helps broadcasters capture the money by capturing the conversation on Twitter,” he said.

     

    Talking of partnership, Twitter UK’s head of broadcast partnerships Dan Biddle said that Twitter is the ‘water cooler conversations’ that won’t wait till the next day. He also delved on how producers could make the second screen important to their brand as the first screen. “Take the content and tweet. You give people the tweet that they hoped they had tweeted. It is not only about the share, it is also about the reach,” informed Biddle.  

     

    Biddle gave ways of reaching out to the audience:

     

    Use Hashtags: these are the moments, they are the campfire around which we tell stories. Every time you put a hashtag, people tweet more.

     

    Use @handles: That’s your presence and relationship on Twitter, that’s the voice that you have which talks to the audience.

     

    Interactions: How do you make followers? How do you turn the hashtags into something more? It is important that you reward conversations on Twitter.

     

    “We don’t see as many @handle’s as we see hashtags, which is strange. @handle is the voice of you, your show and it is the voice that can connect even after your show is over,” he said.

    According to Biddle, the first screen is the first screen only for one week, till the time the show is on air. For the rest of the time, it is the mobile, the second screen, which becomes important.  So let people know you are on Twitter and the trick to that is it you let people know that you are there, put it out on shows, during advertising,” he added.  

     

    Twitter is a part of your digital strategy.  “While it is the heart of digital strategy, there is more to it. It can help you drive audiences to SVOD, OTT, where ever you want,” he informed.

    According to Twitter officials, they find the best results when they work with their partners from the beginning.

     

    Midha who spoke on the data, started off by giving the one big phenomena, that the impressions were shifting to Twitter during live moments. “The World Cup Brazil 2014 saw 33 per cent increase in tweets and 85 per cent increase in impressions.  The audience has shifted to Twitter while the content is on TV,” she said.

     

    Talking of the US primetime market, Midha said that roughly 3/4th of all programming, now includes either a hashtag or some sort of tweet or voting mechanism. “That’s quite a lot.” This apart, on an average five integrations happen during a single telecast. But the big question is: Does this work? “It does work. And we are getting early results,” she said confidently.

     

    Citing example of the US reality show, Anjali said that the actual tweets per minute when the broadcaster introduces the hashtag, sees a 20 per cent lift in tweets as against when the audiences organically create it. She pointed out that 66 per cent of people prefer to see TV tweets from official show accounts.

     

    An important finding is that for a lot of people, actors and the cast are the most preferred source for news from TV. “Live tweeting from casts sees 64 per cent lift in total conversation volumes, while from show account it sees a hike of 7 per cent,” she informed.

     

    The session also delved on how broadcasters can monetise content through Twitter Amplify. “It is a partnership between Twitter, content and advertisers,” said Twitter Amplify international head Marie Sornin.

     

    Explaining how it functions, Sornin said that as TV broadcasters tweet some content, that tweet gets distributed to followers. The advertiser gives its ad to the broadcaster to integrate with the content. The broadcaster pays Twitter to distribute the message to a targeted audience. “So the advertiser pays to the content creator and the content creator pays Twitter to distribute the message,” she informed adding that Twitter Amplify leads to monetisation, more participation and engagement.

     

  • BBC signs partnership with Twitter Amplify

    BBC signs partnership with Twitter Amplify

    MUMBAI: BBC Global News has announced a new partnership with Twitter Amplify, the social broadcast network service’s innovative video promotion tool.

     

    This is the first Twitter Amplify partnership with a global news broadcaster. Commenting on the same, BBC global news director of digital & technology James Montgomery said, “This new collaboration harnesses our global reach and newsgathering capabilities to bring our advertising partners clever and impressive products. Building on the efforts of BBC America’s partnership with Twitter, we’re thrilled to bring our ad partners with us at the cutting edge of news.”

     

    BBC Global News will provide the global Twitter community timely in-tweet video clips that complement its global newsgathering operation. This partnership offers BBC Global News and its future brand partners an integrated cross-platform tool to reach new audiences on Twitter. BBC Global News operates BBC World Service radio, BBC World News television, and bbc.com/news outside the UK.

     

    “What makes this partnership exciting is the amazing content Twitter users will get from BBC Global News, no matter where they are in the world,” said Twitter Amplify senior director Glenn Brown. “We look forward to working with BBC Global News to bring these programmes to market.”

     

    BBC.com has already begun production of a new in-Tweet broadcast, #BBCTrending, a new series of innovative short form video broadcasts that will be presented by Anne-Marie Tomchak (@AMTomchak) and will launch later this fall. The broadcast will give users the inside story behind the latest trending phenomena on social media that day. #BBCTrending is distributed to the 4.8 million followers of the BBC international news Twitter handle, @BBCWorld, and will be enhanced by Twitter Amplify.

     

    #BBC Trending will incorporate three key elements:

     

    1. The BBC’s international social media reach and 24-hour video production operation
    2. The BBC’s global newsgathering and monitoring operations, which provide both round the clock news reporting and monitoring of global TV, radio, press, internet and news agency sources, and
    3. Twitter Amplify’s innovative real-time video promotion tool.

     

    “Being a part of this new project is thrilling,” said Tomchak. As the face of #BBCTrending, Tomchak will be working with production units across the BBC to identify and build compelling conversations on what’s trending around the world. “On Trending, we’re tapping the most powerful internal insight tools and the massive BBC international newsgathering and language operations to decipher why and how trends are happening on social media around the world.”

     

    In April, BBC America signed a similar deal with Twitter Amplify to offer the first in-Tweet branded video synced to hit series, including Top Gear.