HuffPo Launches Separate 'Twitter Edition'; More Focus On Real-Time News

David Kaplan<http://paidcontent.org/bio/32/>
[cid:[email protected]]<http://twitter.com/davidaKaplan/>@davidaKaplan<http://twitter.com/davidaKaplan/>
 Apr 8, 2010 6:00 AM ET

The Huffington Post<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/> is launching a "Twitter 
edition" that is intended to serve as an extension and a distinct entity from 
the main news and opinion site, the company told paidContent. The primary 
purpose is to harness the social networking aspects of the site to create a 
real-time news service for each of HuffPo's 19 sections. The move follows the 
introduction<http://paidcontent.org/article/419-huffington-post-adds-sponsored-tweets-to-the-revenue-mix-goal-includes-/>
 of sponsored Tweets across a number of channels as part of president and chief 
revenue officer Greg Coleman's goal doubling HuffPo's revenue over the next 
year. But in separate conversations with co-founder and editor-in-chief Arianna 
Huffington, CEO Eric Hippeau and chairman Ken Lerer, I was told that the 
advertising part is secondary, at least for the moment.

Right now, the key thing is to get HuffPo users to accept and use the new 
Twitter edition format and the three executives are confident that they will. 
(Examples of the Twitter edition pages include 
tech<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/technology/twitter>, 
politics<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/politics/twitter> and 
comedy<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/comedy/twitter>.)

"The idea is to produce an entirely separate edition from The Huffington Post 
with the same kind of content we always have provided-but super-charged, if you 
will, for Twitter users," Lerer told paidContent. "We think it's reasonable to 
assume that there will be more and more Twitter users; we think it's here to 
stay. As more users get accustomed to it, this will be a way that users will 
increasingly seek their news from our site. I can see people coming to the main 
site and going to the Twitter editions. Eventually, I can see people just going 
to the Twitter edition instead of the main Huffington Post sites and verticals. 
Ultimately, it will end up being as significant an addition to The Huffington 
Post as we've made to date."

At least at first, HuffPo readers will not be going straight to the Twitter 
edition. As Huffington told me, the Twitter edition front page is still in the 
works. "We want to see how people use the Twitter edition and that will 
influence how we create the front page for it," she said. She described the 
integration of the Twitter format into HuffPo as a natural step for them. 
"Twitter has become an essential means of newsgathering and sharing. But 
readers want someone who can sift through all the feeds and curate the best, 
most relevant news. And that's our role."

She noted that editors of the 19 HuffPo sections, including the local sites, 
will be the curators of the corresponding Twitter edition verticals, which 
include politics, technology, entertainment and other channels. The tweets 
won't just come from HuffPo regulars, Hippeau added. "This is our way of doing 
breaking news, using real-time Twitter feeds of people that we have followed, 
people who have a certain authority on the news we cover, whether it's health 
care reform or the Academy Awards or technology or sports." The site's audience 
will also be able to enter their Twitter account IDs and tweet from the HuffPo 
Twitter edition as well.

"We're one part social network, one part news content site," Hippeau said. "So 
for us, the question has always been how to use Facebook, Twitter and other 
social networking tools and our content and integrate it with our advertisers. 
There's a number of different ways we can do this. But for right now, along 
with everyone else, we're still in the experimental stage and we're testing a 
variety of methods and ideas."

In terms of deriving revenue from the Twitter edition, Hippeau, Huffington and 
Lerer said that is coming soon as well. How soon? Hippeau said there might be 
some clues next week after Twitter is expected to formally discuss its revenue 
model at its 
Chirp<http://chirp.twitter.com/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=2010ed2>
 conference. "We hope after they announce it, we'll be able to partner with 
them on whatever they'll be offering," Hippeau said.

Speaking of the business, I asked all three how the company's revenue growth 
and profitability are faring. We have heard rumors that HuffPo, which raised a 
huge $25 million funding in December 2008, was having some cash problems and 
might be seeking an additional round. All were adamant that HuffPo would not be 
raising more money anytime soon. "I hadn't heard those rumors, and the idea 
that we need a cash infusion is completely wrong," Hippeau said. Lerer added, 
"A significant portion of the $25 million is still in the bank, if we needed it 
and we don't."

While they noted that HuffPo doesn't release its financial numbers, all 
insisted that revenue had doubled in the past year. Hippeau said he expected 
the company to reach profitability sometime this year. "The latest comScore 
numbers have us at 24 million monthly uniques and the panel-only numbers have 
us at 12 million, which is more than 100 percent growth over the previous 
year," Hippeau said. "We're confident that our business is solid and that we'll 
continue to double revenues this year as well."

Update: Here's HuffPo's 
announcement<http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/Huffington_Post_Twitter_Edition.pdf>
 (pdf).
http://paidcontent.org/article/419-huffpo-launches-separate-twitter-edition-more-focus-on-real-time-news/
________________________________
José A. López
Globomedia, Dpto. de Documentación-Comunicación
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



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