Threads, the new social app from Meta, had
a fast start this month when it racked up 100 million downloads in less than a
week. With so much momentum, the app seemed well on its way to dethroning
Twitter.
But rapid downloads do not necessarily
translate to long-term success. Now the question is whether Threads has staying
power.
So we embarked on an experiment. We
compiled a list of 15 of some of the most-followed celebrities and high-profile
figures on Twitter who joined Threads, including Katy Perry, Ellen DeGeneres,
Bill Gates, Britney Spears, Shakira, and Oprah Winfrey. Then we compared their
activity on Twitter with their activity on Threads every day since July 5, when
Threads was released. We also looked at what they did on Instagram, which is
owned by Meta and developed Threads.
The idea was to see which social platform
kept the celebrities — who either declined to comment or didn’t respond to
requests for comment — the most active. What we found is just an early
snapshot, but it might provide some clues to where Threads is headed.
Many celebrities initially embraced
Threads
DeGeneres, who joined Twitter in 2008, had
not tweeted since late April. When Threads rolled out, she was among the first
3,000 people to download the app.
“Welcome to Gay Twitter!” she posted on
Threads on July 5. Her message quickly garnered over 7,000 replies.
Of the 15 celebrities we followed, DeGeneres
was one of three who had stopped posting on Twitter in recent months and became
active on Threads. The other two were Selena Gomez, who hadn’t tweeted since
late May, and Winfrey, who hadn’t posted on Twitter since January. Gomez used
Threads to say “hi” to her fans, while Winfrey said she was on Threads to
promote a musical remake of the film “The Color Purple,” which she produced.
Other celebrities, such as Demi Lovato,
began posting more regularly on Threads than on Twitter. In the first week of
Threads’ release, Lovato posted six times on Threads and shared two replies to
one of her posts, but posted just once on Twitter to promote the rock version
of her hit song “Sorry Not Sorry.”
Lovato used Threads to engage with her
fans, asking them for music recommendations and thread puns, even as her
followers on the app were a small fraction of what she had accumulated on
Twitter. As of Wednesday, she had 2 million followers on Threads and 53 million
on Twitter.
Wiz Khalifa was the most prolific on
Threads, before cooling off.
Of the celebrities we followed, Wiz Khalifa
was the most active on Threads by far, publishing original posts and sharing
other people’s messages and replies.
The rapper, whose real name is Cameron
Jibril Thomaz, posted an average of 38 times a day on Threads in the first two
weeks of the app’s release, while averaging five posts a day on Twitter.
His Threads posts generally mixed text,
photos and videos with nuggets about his personal life. “Proudly bringing the
weed to threads,” he wrote in his first post on July 5, accompanied by a short
video of him lighting a joint.
But the rapper’s activity on Threads
gradually declined. He replied to over 100 posts — mostly to people who had
responded to his own posts — the first week after Threads was launched. That
number dropped in the second week, coupled with fewer original posts and
shares.
Starting on July 16, he ramped up on
Twitter, sometimes posting more than 10 times a day. He is still more active on
Threads, but has begun publishing similar content on both platforms.
Some celebrities have started treating
Threads and Twitter the same.
Is there a difference between Threads and
Twitter? Not if you ask Jimmy Fallon, Shakira, or the Bollywood star Shah Rukh
Khan.
Over the last three weeks, they were among
the celebrities who published identical or virtually identical posts on Twitter
and Threads. That showed they may not be making a distinction between the
platforms and are using both as broadcast mechanisms.
On July 12, for instance, Fallon retweeted
congratulations to “That’s My Jam,” a game show he hosts, for an Emmy Award
nomination. He published the same message on Threads, though without the
hashtags he used on his Twitter post. He has since not posted on Twitter or Threads.
From July 6 through July 13, Shakira posted
a series of pictures to Threads, including of a Fendi fashion show, a picture of
herself and the songwriter David Stewart, and photos of herself in London — all
of which she also put on Twitter with the same captions.
Khan shared posters of his upcoming movie
“Jawan” to Twitter, Threads and Instagram with the same captions. But he appeared
to have a slight preference for Twitter: On July 13, he used the “AskSRK”
hashtag on the platform for fans to ask him questions about the movie.
Instagram wins!
Of the 15 celebrities we tracked who joined
Threads, four — Perry, Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, and Miley Cyrus — had not
posted on the new app.
And like Khalifa, others appeared to lose
some of their initial enthusiasm for Threads. Shakira, after being active on
Threads during the app’s first week, had not posted on it since July 13. DeGeneres,
who posted six times during her first week on Threads, had done so only once in
the past week.
Their falling engagement was not unusual.
The average time that users spent on Threads was 3.3 minutes a day as of
Monday, down from 19 minutes as of July 6, according to data from Sensor Tower,
a market intelligence firm. In contrast, users spent an average of 60 minutes a
day on Instagram and 29.3 minutes on Twitter, according to Sensor Tower.
A Meta spokesperson declined to comment. On
Wednesday, Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s CEO, said in an earnings call that
Threads had exceeded Meta’s expectations and that it was working on making fast
improvements to the app and improving retention. He said he did not expect to
make money from Threads for at least a few years until the company got the user
experience right.
Twitter, which its owner, Elon Musk, is
renaming X, did not respond to a request for comment.
Instagram was the most popular with more
than half of the celebrities we followed over the past three weeks, based on
the number of days they were active on each platform. (We excluded Instagram
Stories that they posted from our tally since those can be ephemeral.)
Kardashian was on Instagram for 16 days
during that period, compared with none on Threads and three on Twitter. Her
activity in that time consisted of 19 Instagram posts and 16 tweets.
Spears was on Instagram for 14 days,
compared with three on Threads and three on Twitter. She posted 35 times on
Instagram, versus fives times each on Threads and Twitter.
But in a sign of the tempestuous
relationship that people can have with social media, the singer briefly
deactivated her Instagram account on Saturday — which also turned off her
Threads account, since both are connected — before reactivating it.
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