Twitter 101: An official how-to guide for the David Lettermans of the business world

twitter-101-e28094-getting-startedMicroblogging service Twitter is hot — or at least it has been experiencing heat waves of growth. So the company has just rolled out an extensive guide so businesses can get a better understanding of how to make use of its 140-character broadcasting service. Called Twitter 101, the guide includes a whole range of stuff: Simple explanations about its features, case studies from companies like Best Buy and Dell, best practices, and links to some related sites. All in all, the information seems pretty basic.

And yet, prominent brands — like David Letterman, host of the Late Show with David Letterman — still seem to be getting their heads around the service, so this guide comes at a great time. Twitter 101 is also not the only explanation-focused interface upgrade that the company has planned. The company is also planning a new homepage, to be launched next week, that will ”a search box, information on Twitter trends and a panoply of more specific information about how they can use Twitter,” according to AllThingsD.

twitter-101-for-business-e28094-a-special-guideThe service has been growing fast, sometimes by leaps, sometimes by bounds, but also sometimes by small hops — at least according to third party services, as it doesn’t release internal numbers. It is still trying to take flight. In June, comScore reported that it had 20.1 million US users, up 14 percent from May’s 17.6 million users. But in May, it grew only 3.5 percent, from 17 million in April. Meanwhile, various reports show that not all Twitter users are actively using the site; some are just reading tweets but not sending them, while others are signing up but not coming back. This may not be entirely bad news, as users could be taking months to get used to the service (see our previous coverage on that for more).

Twitter 101 makes no mention of how Twitter might make money. Many have expected the company to roll out premium services designed for businesses, although this could be coming later. Twitter 101 could just be setting the stage for revenue. Meanwhile, the answer to David Letterman’s naive question about the service the other night, posed to show guest Kevin Spacey (”Does that cost you money, to be on Twitter?“), is still a complete “no.”

The guide was announced by Twitter co-founder Biz Stone today at Fortune’s Brainstorm: Tech summit currently happening in Pasadena, Calif. Interviewer Adam Lashinsky asked him on-stage about the business model. His reply: “The plan is to do that this year– to show some signs of life for a revenue approach” — the “first step” is “Twitter 101.”

Next Story: Twitter 101 not immune to Twitter’s technical problems?
Previous Story: Palm restores iTunes compatibility to Pre

Bookmark and Share

Tags:

Photo of Eric Eldon

About the Author, Eric Eldon

Eric currently covers digital media technology and business news, especially what's happening on social networks and their platforms. He also writes and edits stories about venture capital, and lots of other stuff, too. He started at VentureBeat in the spring of 2007, half a year or so after Matt Marshall left his reporting job at the San Jose Mercury News to found the site. Eric previously cofounded a startup called Writewith, that was building editorial software for newspapers and other groups of writers. The startup didn't work out, but he learned a lot.

  • Im a twitter user and it quite nice to have that site around, cause it will feed you what is happening around the globe. In short it will keep you updated.

    But the thought of doing sorts like essay writing would be a great tool to have a nice thought for a day. It will keep our brain work and do some inner comments on the end of the day