Can you tell?
Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) April 12, 2013
Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) March 30, 2013
Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) March 17, 2013
Wayne Rooney (@WayneRooney) April 7, 2013
Any ideas? Anyone?
No, I’m not sure either. In the meantime, I’ll just leave this here:
Example: a Twitter user is paid by a brand owner or marketing practitioner specifically to use Twitter to promote a brand, product or service. The brand owner or marketing practitioner should ensure that the Twitter user discloses the payment by including #ad within their tweet. As tweets are limited to 140 characters, the use of the #ad hashtag allows maximum room for the message itself, but also makes clear to consumers that the message has been paid for.

Cheers.
H/T Andrew Allsop.
I wonder what the ASA will make of it.
Update: Sad times.




Interestingly, the “authentic” tweets seem to come from his iPhone. The Nike ad seems to be sent from iPad.
The other unmarked sponsored tweets seem to come from BlackBerry – see https://twitter.com/WayneRooney/status/324098930944126976
Ha, awesome; nice spot.
Side note: is there a plug-in for Chrome that let’s you see that ‘tweeted from’ data? I click on that link but don’t see the data… 😦
I get it straight from the API. It’s displayed in Dabr. Don’t know about plugins.
Of course! Got it, cheers.
Thanks for the hat tip James and I’m honoured to have inspired a post!!
Andrew