As part of an ongoing effort to engage newcomers and social novices, Twitter has revamped its homepage for people who are not signed-in to its service.
The change will affect
“many millions of people,” according to Gabor Cselle, a product manager at Twitter.
Now, when those people visit Twitter.com, they will be presented with topics to explore,
including Politics, Pop Artists and, of course, Cute Animals.
“Click on the topic, and you’ll see a timeline of Tweets from some of the most popular accounts in that topic,”
Cselle explains in a new blog post. “It’s rich real-time content, just like the Twitter experience for users who log in.”
Twitter is introducing the new Twitter.com on
desktop to U.S. consumers first, with the intention of bringing it to international markets over time.
Long criticized for flying over the heads’ of average users, Twitter has been
taking steps to simplify its service and encourage users to stick around for longer durations.
Earlier this month, for example, Twitter retired its #discover and activity tabs for all iOS and
Android mobile users and moved trends to the search page. Trying to take the guesswork out of trend-spotting, Twitter is also added descriptions to trends -- and in some cases, more data about a trend
and its trajectory.
Counting on the stickiness of moving images, Twitter also recently acquired live-video platform Periscope, and began testing auto-play video ads among consumers with
iPhones and other iOS-supported devices.
Despite efforts to broaden its mass-market appeal, however, Twitter’s user growth continues to slow, according to a recent forecast from eMarketer. Last year, Twitter's U.S. user base grew 12.1% to reach
about 48.4 million users -- while user growth should fall into the single digits this year, eMarketer estimated.
By contrast, the number of U.S. Instagram users increased nearly 60% in 2014,
bringing the social network’s domestic monthly user base to 64.2 million people, according to eMarketer.