Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover has come with a lot of changes, but his rebranding of the platform to « X » may be the final nail in the coffin of the once-beloved tech titan.
Though Musk announced that Twitter would be renamed « X » on Jul. 23, it wasn’t until Jul. 31 that the change to « X » went live on Apple’s App Store. That change had an immediate effect on how many people download the app, according to an analysis from media strategist Eric Seufert.
Seufert looked at Twitter/ X’s ranking on the Apple App Store’s « Top Downloaded » chart from Jul. 27 to Aug. 15 and found that the app’s average ranking fell significantly after the rebranding, from 35 to 54.
« My hypothesis is that, while the terminally-online are entirely aware of Twitter’s rebrand to X, most consumers aren’t, » Seufert wrote in a post that accompanied his findings, « and their searches for ‘Twitter’ on platform stores surface ads and genuine search results that are in no way redolent of Twitter. »
It isn’t just Twitter’s new name that’s likely causing confusion, it’s its new look, too. A search for « Twitter » on the App Store on August 21 does offer up X as the first result, but the bold, black listing is practically unrecognizable as the new evolution of Twitter. There’s little reference to its bright, bird-y past in the listing’s visuals or descriptive text.
Other analyses from Seufert show Twitter/ X’s « Top Downloaded » chart performance against that of other social media platforms between Aug. 1 and Aug 11. WhatsApp and TikTok remain healthy and show little change and new competitor Threads also makes a strong showing in the top 10, beating WhatsApp and TikTok for certain time periods while Twitter languishes.
Given Musk’s focus on revitalizing revenue, these numbers are troubling. You can’t grow a business, or your bottom line, without new users.