The new collaboration between Twitter and American Express will turn the
social media service into a shopping cart. American Express members who sign up
will be able to buy products by mentioning the appropriate hashtag in a Tweet.
The @AmexSync account will tweet back with a confirmation hashtag. Once you
tweet that confirmation hashtag, American Express will shoot you a confirmation
e-mail and give you 15 minutes to confirm you want the product. Your card will
be charged and the goods shipped to your billing address.
The two companies announced the partnership on Monday and kicked it off with
a single product offering, a $25 American Express gift card for $15. Other
products will be available starting Wednesday morning.
To start Twitter shopping you'll need to first sync your American Express
card with Twitter. The service will only work with compatible American Express
cards (no prepaid or corporate cards) and a public Twitter account.
Since protected accounts aren't allowed, there's no way to take advantage of
a discount without it being public information. That means each purchase is not
only money for the various companies involved, but also an automatic promotion
for the product and its brands.
The first discounted products American Express will sell are an Amazon Kindle
Fire, a Sony Action cam, a Donna Karan designed bracelet and an Xbox 360. Though
various companies will tweet out the hashtags, all official product offers will
be collected under the American Express Favorites section.
This is not the first time American Express has experimented with social
media. Its Amex Sync program, launched last March, offers discounts on Twitter,
Foursquare, Facebook and Xbox Live. On Twitter, you tweet the hashtag for an
offer and then go make the purchase in person or through a separate online
store. The discount is then applied to your American Express account within
eight weeks.
Social networks have been working hard to break into e-commerce. Facebook
announced Facebook Gifts, which lets users make purchases for friends directly
through the social network.
Buying products this way is a unique case. Because it's for select discounted
products, many of which will only be available for a set period, tweet-buying is
not for people who are searching for a specific product or comparison shopping.
It has much more in common with flash sales sites like Fab than e-commerce
mainstays like Amazon.
By wrapping the entire purchasing process in a hashtag, the service makes
buying fast and easy. If it takes off, we could see hashtags for products in
commercials and print ads.