The Guardian
topics

Twitter Copycat Yammer Already Earning Cold Hard Cash

image Twitter may have amassed a sizable following, but six weeks after its launch, microblogging service Yammer—or Twitter with a business model as its being called—is already bringing in revenue, albeit small. The service, based in West Hollywood, California, is aimed at the corporate crowd and and as CEO David Sacks told the NYtimes.com, tries to help workers be more productive. Instead of asking, “What are you doing?” as Twitter does, it asks, “What are you working on?” The idea is apparently to stop all those emails that can be quickly answered from blocking up email boxes.

So how does it earn money? Anyone with a work email can sign up for free. But if a company wants to join officially—which gives it more control over security and how workers use it—they must pay $1 a month for each employee signed on. The startup currently has 10,000 companies with 60,000 users signed up. Of those, 200 companies with 4,000 users are paying for the service. Some of the companies, too, are quite impressive. Telefonica (NYSE: TEF), the Spanish global operator, uses it in its 350 member R&D unit, while the UK’s BBC has some 500 employees trying it out. Twitter, meanwhile, is still casting about for a business model.

Related Stories
Oct 22, 2008 6:12 AM ET
Share

Posted In: Social Media, Companies

  • digital bear

    Twitter may have been a flash in the pan.  They had stability issues, management issues and never really differentiated what they were other than a novel way to track people which was just as easily embedded in other services.  They are also hunting for a long term CEO, no?

Unhealthily Obsessed With Mobile Content | mocoNews Newsletter

Know something we don’t?

Send Us a News Tip

All tips are anonymous and untraced.

Sponsors

Contributors