Skip to main content

Will Facebook succeed in luring journalists away from Twitter?

will facebook succeed in luring journalists away from twitter
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Facebook is increasingly trying to get its users to stay on its site for any reason. Earlier this year, the company partnered with e-commerce giant Shopify to encourage consumers to buy from within Facebook. And now, the social media titan’s push to retain users is extending to journalists.

According to Wired, Facebook is making inroads to persuade journalists to use its platform instead of Twitter for news gathering. That’s going to be a tall order, as Twitter’s reputation and usability as a real-time, quick-fire social network currently makes it the choice for journalists tracking breaking news and other stories.

But Facebook bets it can win this battle. It wants to make it easier for journalists to find news on the site, as well as to gauge reader’s reactions and search for images and videos related to news stories. That’s why Facebook is offering journalists the opportunity to sign up for Signal, its trending tool that sources text, videos, images, and data from Facebook and Instagram. According to Facebook’s blog post, it’s merely giving journalists what they’ve always wanted from Facebook, as some reporters have been petitioning the social network to make it part of their news-gathering efforts.

Reporters get access to a dashboard that lets them track trending and emerging stories, follow chatter surrounding public figures on a virtual leaderboard, and look for public conversations, images, and videos. Knowledge of hashtag usage is a plus, as reporters can search for relevant stories by tags or location on Facebook and Instagram.

Facebook also wants to make this as convenient as possible for journalists to use. To serve this aim, journalists will be able to embed any Facebook or Instagram post into their coverage with a simple embed code. Beyond this, entire newsrooms have the chance to integrate Signal APIs to bring curated content right to their sites as well as broadcasts.

Although this is the company’s latest foray into luring reporters, it hasn’t been its first overture. Earlier, Facebook made the Mentions app available to journalists, so that they could broadcast live. Before that, the company debut Instant Articles, where select publications could post their stories directly on Facebook.

Since Facebook is all about pushing its own brand, Signal’s unveiling also relates to Facebook presenting its value to the journalism community. By letting journalists determine what conversations are most relevant and popular to people at any given moment, it’s helping them tell stories with greater efficiency. In turn, that makes Facebook even that much more valuable to its users.

Only time will tell if Facebook succeeds in making itself the one-stop shop for journalists. In the meantime, it’ll gather feedback from early users to make Signal as helpful as possible to the journalism community.

Marc Schenker
Marc Schenker is a copywriter who's an expert in business and marketing topics like e-commerce, B2Bs, digital marketing and…
Twitter bans product changes this week to stop employees from ‘going rogue’
The edit Tweet button shown in the Twitter app on a phone.

Buying the bird app was apparently the easy part. Twitter's transition to being under Elon Musk's ownership is already off to a rough start it seems. And it's only been less than a day since the deal for the Tesla CEO to buy the company for $44 billion was reached.

On Monday, Bloomberg reported that Twitter has essentially banned changes to its product through Friday, with the only exception being "business-critical" changes approved by a vice president. The short-term limit on product changes isn't so much surprising as the reason given for it: Apparently, the ban was set to prevent "employees who may be miffed about the deal from 'going rogue.'"

Read more
Twitter update will help keep tweets from disappearing while they are being read
A Twitter logo graphic.

Twitter has offered several updates recently to improve engagement on its platform. Changes such as making Twitter Spaces more accessible and giving users the option to soft block annoying followers have proven to be beneficial to the platform. Now, another long-awaited change has been made by the social media giant.

Twitter Support has announced that an update to address an issue with tweets disappearing will appear in the coming days. This means that users can now choose when they wish to load the newly accumulated tweets on their timeline.

Read more
Twitter is facing its own outages as Facebook users flock to other sites
A Twitter logo graphic.

When Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram all went down, the groundswell of people rushing to other platforms to continue their social posting and messaging -- likely to poke fun at Facebook, frankly -- was intense. So much so, it seems, that Twitter is also experiencing problems.

Everyone's favorite doomsday watchlist Downdetector shows many reports of issues with Twitter, and staff members here at Digital Trends are seeing intermittent problems loading tweets -- both on the timeline and from individual links. So far the issue doesn't seem universal, and content usually loads after a handful of page refreshes, so we can hope this is a little blip and not the start of a larger problem.

Read more