Wall Street PR

Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR): Combating The Decreasing User Problem

Boston, MA 06/03/2014 (wallstreetpr) – The sparsely growing micro blogging site, Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) is moving towards launching plethora of strategies to boost its user figures for robust growth. The company has stopped growing substantially and is grappling primarily with the decreasing users in the U.S. and allied countries. Thus, Twitter is sure to regain its position after execution of its other projects too.

Twitter TV Gaining Popularity

The Breaking Bad Series of AMC has emerged as the champion of the TV series metrics. It has been one of the leading screen activities on the microblogging site than any other TV series. The Neilson Company is keeping a record of the readers following tweets related to a program on the day it is released on air. The company confirmed that the drug drama has the maximum follower equaling approximately 6 million readers of the episodes each day. This has provided a boost to the Twitter TV providing a boost to its market share too.

Twitter Needs Quick Promotional Strategy

Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) is facing a slow growth of users in the U.S. and its maximum users are from overseas. Thus in order to attract more users in the U.S., the company needs to revamp its strategy before it gets washed off completely. Thus, TWTR’s CEO, Dick Costolo shared its plans and strategy to restructure and revise its services to obtain desired results at Tech Conference in San Francisco. Twitter is speculated to be paying foreign wireless service operators to provide free tweet feature on the phone version of twitter. Costolo remarked to have struck several deals for amassing market share.

The deals primarily focus on cutting down the data usage cost while using twitter thereby facilitating the users in using the app. It has collaborated with foreign careers to promote Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) Access. The idea is to provide frees services for a limited time frame before the actual charges begin to operate. The usage of the feature makes the user addictive thereby giving up for subscriptions and services easily.

Published by Benjamin Roussey

Benjamin Roussey is from Sacramento, California. He has two master’s degrees and served four years in the U.S. Navy. His bachelor’s degree is from CSUS (1999) where he was on a baseball pitching scholarship. His second master’s degree is an MBA in Global Management from the University of Phoenix (2006). He has worked for small businesses, public agencies, and large corporations. He has lived in Korea and Saudi Arabia where he was an ESL instructor. Benjamin spends his time in between Northern California and Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, committing himself to his craft of freelance and website writing. http://www.facebook.com/ben.rouss