Just as the growth of blogs opened up a space for dedicated blog search sites and filters, so, too, the twittersphere may have reached that point…
GoTo.com/Overture founder Bill Gross’ take on the idea is TweetUp, a search service that shows users relevant and influential tweets – if their authors pay for the privilege.
Prompted by search input, TweetUp uses both a relevance algorithm and a Google (NSDQ: GOOG) AdSense-style keyword bidding marketplace to compile tweets and tweeters, then will serve the results through third parties on a revenue-share basis, including the Seesmic and Twidroid clients; websites Answers.com (NSDQ: ANSW), Business Insider and PopURLs; plus TwitterFeed and Klout.
This method, Gross reckons, “pushes the best tweets to the top of the results of users’ searches”, and it “enables serious tweeters to expand their following quickly and cost-effectively”.
Gross has raised $3.5 million for the effort, led by Index Ventures and from Betaworks, Steve Case’s Revolution LLC, First Round Capital, Jason Calacanis and Jeff Jarvis.
If it works, TweetUp may end up creating a Google-esque business model for the emerging, leapfrogging Twitter itself to making a real business model from the service in the process. It’s tempting to view it as a Technorati for Twitter.
But if there’s a problem, it may be that tweets authors have paid for users to see aren’t necessarily the “best” tweets – TweetUp may be of more interest to marketers courting eyeballs than creators seeking audiences.
Gross’ explanation to Kara Swisher is telling…
Twitter has long operated a one-size-fits-all “suggested followers” list, and popular client TweetDeck – in which Betaworks also invested – also recognized the problem of discoverability last year by introducing its curated TweetDeck Directory of hot tweeters. TweetUp’s twin challenge will be to improve on these offerings – and to hope users aren’t affronted by seeing sponsored tweets in their results.
“TweetUp is to Twitter what Google is to the web,” Gross tells NYTimes.com. Thing is, the specific importance of dedicated blog search engines and aggregators has waned as blogs have become merely part of the web. Whether the same will happen of Twitter, we don’t know yet.