Rahul Sachitanand
Jul 25, 2021

Twitter ad revenue crosses $1 billion in Q2

Social-media platform sees overall topline grow by 74% as pandemic rebound and spike in user metrics drive growth

Twitter Blue, Spaces and Tip Jar were launched in Q2
Twitter Blue, Spaces and Tip Jar were launched in Q2

The recovery from the depths of the pandemic that is being reflected in the earnings of ad networks such as Publicis and IPG, as well as leading advertisers such as Coca-Cola, seems to have rubbed off on social-media platform Twitter too.

For the second quarter of its financial year, the platform reported a 74% increase in revenue, with ad sales crossing $1 billion. The company surged to an operating profit in the period after stumbling to a heavy loss in the corresponding time frame last year. 

Daily user numbers increased by 11% for the second quarter, with the international segment driving growth on this front. The number of daily users, or what Twitter terms average monetizable daily active users (MDAUs) reached 206 million, as the platform added 7 million users in the quarter.

“We delivered better-than-expected performance across all major products and geographies while growing our audience,” Ned Segal, Twitter’s CFO, said in a media statement. “We continued to make significant progress on our direct response and brand products with updated ad formats, improved measurement and better predictions.”


The company reported that its sales and marketing expenses grew significantly by 46% in the quarter, because of higher sales commissions, people costs and increased marketing expenses.

It has been a busy quarter for Twitter. It introduced its first subscription service, Twitter Blue in Australia and Canada, launched its Spaces audio chat feature on mobile devices for users with 600 followers or more and announced a Tip Jar feature that will enable users to send money to others on the site. Just outside the purview of this period, the firm shut down Fleets, its disappearing-message offering. 

"We're going to be fast to recognise this and take action without hesitation, as we did with Fleets," CEO Jack Dorsey told analysts. "Entirely new formats that are unique to Twitter and our model. This is what we're starting to create. Expect us to start and stop many more features than we have in the past."

(This article first appeared on CampaignAsia.com)

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

16 hours ago

Why Zee5’s language-first bet may be its best yet

As India’s OTT battle intensifies, the streaming platform goes hyperlocal with tech-backed storytelling and tier-2 targeting.

18 hours ago

Cannes Lions, AI, and the integrity reckoning

The first ever Cannes Lions Grand Prix withdrawal for AI misuse signals a watershed moment, but is this just the beginning of a much bigger reckoning for marketing in the AI age?

21 hours ago

India isn’t a muse; it’s time to brand the maker

Global brands borrowed India’s craft. Sam & Andy’s founding partner claims that Indian creators must now reclaim the narrative—with better systems, sharper storytelling, and unapologetic ownership.