The first "pay-by-tweet" service has been launched on Twitter in tie-up with American Express

Story highlights

Twitter's "pay-by-tweet" service is first of kind to let consumers buy goods via short message

Service is tie-up between Twitter and American Express credit card company

"We're turning a tweet into an actual transaction," says Twitter's Berland

Amex will not share account info with Twitter to remove the risk of fraud

San Francisco Financial Times  — 

The first “pay-by-tweet” service has been launched on Twitter, with American Express introducing a service on Monday that lets its cardholders buy products simply by sending a short message.

The integration of a leading payment mechanism into Twitter represents one of the most ambitious attempts yet to build ecommerce directly into a social media site.

“We’re turning a tweet into an actual transaction,” said Leslie Berland, head of digital partnerships and development at the payments company. For the first time, Twitter users will be able to respond to an offer for goods or services and make a purchase without leaving the Twitter site, she added.

Under the arrangement, users who link their Twitter and Amex accounts will be able to accept offers from merchants by tweeting a hashtag included with the offer. Provided they also tweet their confirmation to a follow-up message from Amex, the payments company said it would forward their details to the merchant and complete the transaction.

Ecommerce has been slow to take off on social networks, with retailers who have tried to use their presence on Facebook to stimulate transactions reporting disappointing results.

Twitter itself has tried offers, known as “Twitsclusives”, through which merchants issue discount codes to users that they can use when shopping elsewhere, though these have not been widely adopted.

Companies such as Facebook have held out ecommerce as a significant new source of business in the long term, though it is unclear whether they will be able to profit directly in transactions.

Twitter itself will not share in any of the transaction revenue from the Amex transactions, said Ms Berland, adding: “It is all our technology, built on their platform.”

Twitter could benefit from the increased advertising surrounding ecommerce, as merchants send out more “promoted tweets” to publicise their offers, according to one person familiar with the arrangement.

Twitter was hit by a hacking attack just over a week ago, raising questions about the security of its platform for payments and ecommerce. However, Amex said it would not share any of its account information with Twitter, removing the risk of fraud.

Ms Berland would not comment on whether Amex planned a similar service for Facebook. The payments company already has a service there and on other social networks to help merchants promote offers, though it has yet to add a payment feature to the service.

The new pay-by-tweet service is being launched with offers on three electronics items – Amazon’s Kindle Fire HD tablet, an Xbox console package and a Sony camera – as well as discounted Amex gift cards.