Twitter Announces Support of GIFs, the Internet Goes Crazy
Twitter announced today that it officially , in addition to pictures, videos and regular text. As you can imagine, the Internet went crazy with people tweeting GIFs of all sorts of things. Cats, dogs, World Cup action. You name it.
As of this afternoon, there were more than 220,000 tweets about GIFs. It was a trending topic.
Some companies and other brands got in on the early action. Here’s a small sampling of how companies large and small have used the new GIF capability for their marketing purposes:
Netflix used it as an opportunity to showcase Orange Is the New Black:
That feeling when Twitter became …
— Netflix US (@netflix) Um, hi Wendy’s. This is making me dizzy:
Is there something on our cheek?
— Wendy’s (@Wendys) Hootsuite was instructional:
Posting GIFs to Twitter? Enterprise and Pro users, be sure to switch settings to :
— Hootsuite (@hootsuite) Testing, testing:
Testing gifs on Twitter 😀
— Nickelodeon (@NickelodeonTV) Birchbox celebrates:
This is how we feel about GIFs on Twitter.
— birchbox (@birchbox) Ellen DeGeneres expressed herself:
I just found out you can put GIFs on Twitter
— Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow) Search Engine Land had some fun at the expense of Google’s Matt Cutts:
GIFs are fun! H/T
— Search Engine Land (@sengineland) Twitter announced today that it officially , in addition to pictures, videos and regular text. As you can imagine, the Internet went crazy with people tweeting GIFs of all sorts of things. Cats, dogs, World Cup action. You name it.
As of this afternoon, there were more than 220,000 tweets about GIFs. It was a trending topic.
Some companies and other brands got in on the early action. Here’s a small sampling of how companies large and small have used the new GIF capability for their marketing purposes: