With Over 400,000 Users, Social Media Manager Buffer Gets A Refresh On Web & Mobile, Moves Away From Being A Destination Site

Buffer , the social media manager allowing you schedule posts to Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, is today launching a redesign of its service on both web and mobile. The updates, six months in development, are meant to increase focus on analytics and third-party integrations, encouraging users to post to Buffer across the web, instead of visiting the website itself.
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Buffer, the social media manager allowing you schedule posts to Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, is today launching a redesign of its service on both web and mobile. The updates, six months in development, are meant to increase focus on analytics and third-party integrations, encouraging users to post to Buffer across the web, instead of visiting the website itself.

According to Buffer co-founder Leo Widrich, the biggest change today is that the company is no longer trying to make either the web or iPhone app a dashboard – meaning, a destination for people to add content. Instead, he says, the company wants adding content to happen through Buffer’s integrations across the web.

The reasoning behind today’s changes has to do with the fact that, following the release of the Buffer API in August, over 40 percent of Buffer’s updates were posted through the API and buttons, and this trend continues to grow today. The company wants to push that number closer to 100 percent, if possible. “We heavily try to discourage people to add to Buffer through the web app or iPhone app,” says Widrich.

With the new web app, Buffer’s redesign increases the focus on other features, like analytics, managing the updates queue, and discovering more apps where Buffer is integrated. Specifically, the web application now allows you to copy updates from one stream across to other social account (e.g. drag-and-drop updates from your Twitter account to your Facebook), it introduces a “shuffle” option to let Buffer’s algorithm randomize the order, it now lets you discover your top posts via the improved analytics section and copy them directly to another social account, and it lets you reorder your profiles more easily.

The iPhone app, meanwhile, was also updated today. It no longer serves only as a complimentary app to Buffer’s web application, but can stand independently, never requiring use of the web at all. You can now connect all your social accounts from within the app, upload and Buffer images directly in the app, see more detailed analytics (mentions, likes, comments, when before it only supported clicks and retweets), and it offers a media-rich preview of your queue including images, videos, and link previews.

Widrich says that today, 10,000 websites carry the Buffer button, and it’s now integrated into over 50 app integrations, including Reeder, Pocket, Feedly and more. Of the 410,000 Buffer users, around 10% (44,566) have installed the iPhone app, a number Widrich hopes will grow with today’s update. The Android app will be available in Q1 2013.

Overall, Buffers users are consistently engaged, with 30 percent of the 410,000 active monthly, 20 percent weekly and 10 percent daily. The company also now has 7,000 paid subscribers and a revenue run rate of $900,000.

And Widrich is also excited to report that the Buffer team of seven have gotten their Visas and is now heading back to the U.S. next week. (You may remember that, in December last year, the team raised $400,000 in angel funding, but had to head back to Europe because of immigration laws.)


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