The World Cup has historically been a boon for Twitter, bringing in record traffic and an influx of advertising dollars.The article mentions the existing complaints, like advertisers having no point of contact left in the gutted ad department at Twitter, worries about constantly shifting policies, and a new twist: Apparently automakers had done a fair amount of brand advertising with the platform in the past but are now cutting back due to "questions about whether Twitter’s data would be shared with Mr. Musk’s car company, Tesla".
But this time, when the global soccer tournament started on Nov. 20, Twitter’s U.S. ad revenue was running at 80 percent below internal expectations for that week, three people with knowledge of the figures said.
In tandem, Twitter was rapidly cutting its revenue projections. The company previously forecast that it would generate $1.4 billion in the last three months of the year, down from $1.6 billion a year ago because of the global economic downturn. But as Twitter kept missing its weekly advertising targets, that number slid to $1.3 billion, then to $1.1 billion, two people said.