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    Twitter adds 'buy buttons' to adverts

    SAN FRANCISCO, USA: Twitter has begun testing 'buy buttons' that let people make purchases directly from marketing posts fired off at the globally popular one-to-many messaging service.
    Twitter is testing a buy button to see if users want to buy products or respond to adverts on the one-to-many messaging service. Image:
    Twitter is testing a buy button to see if users want to buy products or respond to adverts on the one-to-many messaging service. Image: Mashable

    The move comes as Twitter works to increase its appeal to people curious about what is happening at any given moment and to reach advertisers eager to connect with them.

    "This is an early step in building functionality into Twitter to make shopping from mobile devices convenient and easy, hopefully even fun," Group Product Manager Tarun Jain said in an online post.

    "In our test, the entire purchase can be completed in just a few taps," he said.

    According to Jain the test is currently limited to a small group of Twitter users in the United States who access the service from mobile devices powered by Apple or Android software.

    Payment, shipping information can be stored

    Users will have the option of having payment and shipping information encrypted and stored to speed up future purchases.

    "We'll be starting the test with a group of artists, brands and non-profit organisations, so follow them now and look out for great products over the coming weeks," Jain said.

    The list of launch partners included Home Depot, Burberry, The Nature Conservancy, Soundgarden and Twenty One Pilots.

    Advertisers will be able to pay to "promote" Twitter messages featuring buy buttons the same way other marketing tweets can be more prominently displayed.

    Financial terms of the buy button arrangement were not disclosed.

    In July, Facebook began testing a feature that lets users make purchases by simply pressing an on-screen "Buy" button.

    The test was limited to a few small- or medium-sized businesses in the United States.

    "People on desktop or mobile can click the 'Buy' button on adverts and page posts to purchase a product directly from a business, without leaving Facebook," the California-based Internet company said in an online post.

    The post said goal was to gauge the potential to drive retail sales through the Facebook newsfeed or on pages at the online social network.

    Social networks are eager to tap into e-commerce, especially as purchases using smartphones or tablet computers grow increasingly common.

    Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge

    Source: I-Net Bridge

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