Thousands of Brands Set to Abandon Advertising on Twitter After Media Agency Calls it a “Serious Risk”

Thousands of the world’s biggest brands are poised to abandon advertising on Twitter after a global media agency called it a “serious risk to brand safety”. The Telegraph has the story

Omnicom – a global media agency which represents 5,000 clients including McDonald’s, Apple and Pepsi – has told customers to pause their Twitter promotions over fears of a “serious risk to brand safety”. 

The decision is a fresh blow for Mr. Musk after a chaotic week in which he introduced and then U-turned on a rollout of subscriptions, suffered an exodus of senior staff and told employees that “bankruptcy is not out of the question”. 

Mr. Musk has been battling an exodus of major advertisers and celebrity users since he bought Twitter at the end of last month in a $44bn (£37bn) deal, with the likes of Volkswagen ditching their spending and Stephen Fry, Whoopi Goldberg and model Gigi Hadid among those to shut their accounts. 

Mr Musk – who has already fired thousands of staff – is hoping to improve the fortunes of the business by allowing users to pay $8 for a “blue tick” previously reserved for celebrities, politicians and other figures of public importance whose identity was verified. 

But the proposal backfired and was paused last week when it led to a wave of imposter accounts pretending to be businesses and famous people. 

Shares in pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly fell more than 2% wiped off its share price last week after an impostor account tweeted that “insulin is now free”. 

Mr. Musk has told Twitter employees that “bankruptcy isn’t out of the question” as it struggles against the economic downturn. In an all-staff call on Thursday, he reportedly told workers the company may have a “net negative cash flow of several billion dollars” next year. 

Mr. Musk has also told the social media site’s staff that they must now spend a minimum of 40 hours a week in the office or be fired. 

In an internal memo sent out late last week, Omnicom reportedly told its brands that they should “pause activity on Twitter in the short term”, adding that issues with the company’s roll-out of its new subscription service had “potentially serious implications” for companies advertising on the site, according to American technology news website the Verge

Omnicom reportedly told clients it had “formally requested that Twitter assure us that these issues will not impact compliant processes, operations, products, brand safety and client investment on the platform in any way”, but had not received a response “seemingly due to the lack of senior leadership now in these areas”.

Mr. Musk, the founder of Tesla, has previously estimated the exodus of brand advertisers costs the tech giant £3.4m a day, though he hopes the subscription service will remedy the business’s ailing finances. 

Current media coverage of Twitter (including this Telegraph article) appears to be exaggerating its troubles. Musk has said Twitter’s user numbers are higher than ever following a boost since he took over. Articles which list celebrities who have left only mention around eight, and most of them are obscure. Musk’s warning about possible bankruptcy was likely a wake-up call to his staff in light of Twitter only being intermittently profitable – though the exodus of advertisers won’t help that of course. Omnicom’s emphasis on “compliant processes” suggests the move is ideologically motivated, as it’s hard to see how a brand could really be harmed by being on Twitter.

Even so, there’s no denying Musk’s first couple of weeks have not exactly been a roaring success. Hopefully he will be able to overcome these difficulties and find a way to make the platform profitable. It’s also worth saying that we’re still waiting for the liberation of those languishing in the Twitter dungeon. Worryingly, some have since been told they are permanently banned. Come on Elon, where are you?

Worth reading in full.

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Uncle Monty
3 years ago

Musk is not bothered if he loses advertising revenue as he intends to change the entire Twitter business model to a blockchain system as per his brother Kimbal’s concept (see attached screenshot). This would mean each tweet will cost a nominal amount of money to post, which will effectively eradicate bot activity. It would also force all account holders to become genuinely ‘verified’ by their ability to pay.

Uncle Monty
3 years ago
Reply to  Uncle Monty

Screenshot

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Uncle Monty

Paddy: “Look, a dead bird!”.

Seamus (looking up): “Where?”.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Ooh, I’d be in such trouble for this one (even though I love the Irish really).

David101
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

An Englishman, Irishman and Scotsman walk into a bar. The bartender looks up, shakes his head and says: “Sorry guys, the punchline’s been censored because you’re all male and there aren’t any Welsh”!

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Uncle Monty

The only functioning Blockchain, already supporting real businesses, real enterprises and real payment systems is the BSV Blockchain. Its currency is BSV.

The rest are simply glorified spreadsheets under centralised control.

You heard it here first.

Whether BSV truly takes off or not is anyone’s guess, though. If we lived in a free market, without government interference, it would be all but certain. However, if it does take off, it will solve an awful lot of problems.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Omnicom – a global media agency which represents 5,000 clients including McDonald’s, Apple and Pepsi – has told customers to pause their Twitter promotions over fears of a “serious risk to brand safety”. 

Are Omnicon the villains from a James Bond film?

Seriously, when is a political movement going to wrest control of nation states from these corrupt, globalist, totalitarian anti-free speech and anti-freedom organisations?

Uncle Monty
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

And ‘as if by magic’ the top three institutional investors in Omnicron are Vanguard, Blackrock and State Street. The same three ‘passive’ investment funds who also happen to be the top three institutional investors in:
McDonalds (And Burger King)
Apple (and Google and Amazon andMicrosoft)
Pepsi ( and Coca Cola)

https://money.cnn.com/quote/shareholders/shareholders.html?symb=OMC&subView=institutional

046E20D8-0489-48C8-9495-E0A384035D81.png
Unutterably Pistoff
Unutterably Pistoff
3 years ago

It used to be possible to browse Twitter feeds, without registering to tweet. So you could read Michael Levitt’s thoughts, or Ben Ervine’s (for example, among many others). They put a stop to that. Now you can read one or a few, and that’s that.
When Musk took over, I’d hoped he’d maybe revise that. You’d bump into some very interesting, sometimes profound stuff. Now you are even censored from reading it.
Do I wait in vain? What benefit is there, to me or anyone else in “signing up”? The ads are all blocked anyway.

Amtrup
3 years ago

The benefit to signing up and logging in appears to be that could then browse the interesting twitter feeds? 🙂

transmissionofflame
3 years ago

When you are scrolling and you get the popup, click Sign Up then when you are presened with the signing up dialogue, click the X to close it and carry on scrolling, I think forever (or until you get the next popup, which takes a good while and can be ignored via same process). Mildly inconvenient. Probably having an account gives you better search features.

ebygum
3 years ago

I ‘joined’ Twitter so that I could read the tweets of doctors/scientists etc…It was quite simple, email and a password….and allows me to follow them without pop-ups, and to follow threads which was impossible before I joined…..
I have had to write down my username as I need it so infrequently, I don’t tweet myself, and they have never sent me an advert or communication of any kind…so I would say just join, unless you have solid reasons not to…

Sontol
Sontol
3 years ago

Elon Musk is one of the main architects and poster boys for the intrinsically totalitarian Climate Change / Net Zero project via his creation of the Tesla EV brand (which involved massive government subsidies).

Until he renounces the oppressive Green ideology he cannot possibly be perceived as promoting a genuinely libertarian and free-speech agenda.

Indeed Mr Musk’s increasingly chaotic and contradictory messages and measures in relation to Twitter seem to indicate a desire to outright destroy what is (with all its faults) a hugely important platform for the exchange of ideas and information, rather than work for its much-needed liberation.

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Sontol

Chaotic and contradictory is SOP for Musk.

And a lot worse, besides.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  Sontol

I’m not clear why you think he wants to destroy Twitter. What’s in it for him?

Anyway, the point of the article is not really Musk but the power of advertisers and big business to control the exchange of ideas. People are used to stuff being free, paid for by advertising, so if as it seems we’re close to or at the point where even a slight hint of allowing a freer exchange of ideas* leads to this kind of threat, we’re in an unhelpful place.

*In truth it’s not the free exchange of ideas that seems to bother these businesses, so much as the exchange of ideas that they for whatever reason do not like – I think we can imagine the kinds of things. Covid, climate “misinformation”, anything “racist”, “sexist”, “trans or homophobic”, anything in short which is not considered “far right”.

ebygum
3 years ago

…I agree, this story is more about the power being exerted by malign globalists against anything they don’t like, or that doesn’t follow the ‘agenda’.…..

As for Musk, I’m a bit ambivalent..he seems to want to open Twitter up, so I’m currently giving him the benefit of the doubt, in regard to Twitter.

I don’t see the point in saying someone’s ALL bad, just because you don’t agree with one, or even many of the aspects of their business…that just doesn’t seem logical to me….I’m not excusing them…but this must matter more especially with big businesses which have to traverse the real world politics of the Green/Woke lobby….

Hasnt that been the subject of philosophical debate, novels and films for decades? Do you work for change from the inside, or the outside?

Sontol
Sontol
3 years ago

Re: I’m not clear why you think he wants to destroy Twitter. What’s in it for him?’ First if all I would like to withdraw my ‘not possible to combine a belief in the Green / Climate Change agenda with that of free-speech’ assertion, that’s clearly nonsense. I also regret the slight ‘Renounce your heresy, witch’ tone of my post. I was allowing my anti environmentalism sentiments to get the better of me. In any case as far as I am aware in practice so far Elon has not made sweeping liberalising changes to moderation policy on Twitter, nor reinstated politically / ideologically motivated account suspensions. The institution of a two tier system with paid subscriptions offering a superior status and presumably privileges also (literally!) undermines absolute freedom of speech on the platform. It was all the above plus the sacking of half the staff and warning about possible bankruptcy that led me to put a questiion mark over Mr Musk’s proclaimed commitment to creating a fully liberal exchange platform, indeed to its success at all. However I was forgetting the real elephant in the room here, which is that various states (eg the US), the EU etc have passed… Read more »

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  Sontol

Yes there’s a lot in what you’re saying

Brett_McS
3 years ago

Telegram operates with about a dozen employees. Some way to go yet, Twitter!

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  Brett_McS

Indeed, I would love to know what all these thousands of people Twitter employs do all day.

NeilParkin
3 years ago

He who pays the piper, calls the tune…

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago

As usual, trust no-one in this affair.

But – as previously stated, many times: Musk is no fan of free speech.

Also, he is not the founder of Tesla. That was Martin Eberhard. See what Musk did to him.

Mybodymyfuckingchoice
3 years ago

Nothing could be better than NOT seeing ads by these globalist COMPANIES. Their presence will always be a threat to free speech. And why not get rid of advertising altogether and become a non-profit? I know, naive.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago

As I posted below I am not sure why they need so many employees but someone has to pay for the servers, maintain the software etc. There’s a difference between non-profit and non-revenue.

JayBee
3 years ago

He should make some people with the Big3 minority backgound executives.
Then this will stop and reverse in an instant.
If he himself belonged to one of the 3, none of that would have happened anyway.

ebygum
3 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Very true….
None of it, absolutely none, is based on real, dearly held, personal beliefs, it’s all just virtue signalling, and ticking the ‘whatever’s fashionable and woke today’ box…..
which is why it changes from day to day, and why it will change again with or without Musk doing a damned thing….

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago

WTF is a “serious risk to brand safety”? I am well aware of the hyperbole associated with marketing but this comment is the most pathetic I’ve heard.

David101
3 years ago

I have been permanently banned from Twitter, which I could only laugh at because I never use it! Perhaps that was why I got banned – I’m just too boring.

marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

I have never seen an advert on twitter. Utube has thousands. Twitter, nope never saw one.