Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk is reportedly considering turning Twitter into a super app with a prominent role for payments should he finalize his planned purchase of the social media platform.
Musk is said to have dropped the hint in a recent All-In podcast.
He called Tencent-owned WeChat a “good model” for a super app, noting that nothing like it exists outside of China.
Musk said it’s important for content creators to have revenue streams and that integrating payments into such an app, whether they’re cryptocurrency or fiat, would be beneficial.
His pitch to investors to fund the acquisition of Twitter involves bringing in as much as $15 million from a Twitter payments business in 2023. Twitter’s current payments business is “negligible,” according to the New York Times.
But Musk also said that an app like this doesn’t necessarily need to be created from Twitter, adding that it could be something new, built from scratch.
WeChat and Alipay have risen to prominence thanks to their all-encompassing apps that span commerce, finance, transportation, and more.
There has yet to be any other platform, particularly in the US, that resembles these players. But several payment providers have been shifting to support a wider array of consumer needs in the last year—and become one-stop shops for consumers’ needs.
- PayPal, for instance, launched a redesigned app in September that bundles a slew of services, including a shopping hub, a high-yield savings account, and even a fundraising platform.
- Buy now, pay later (BNPL) providers like Affirm and Klarna have also launched their own versions of a super app that integrate their core BNPL solutions with other shopping and financial tools.
Super apps are appealing because they solve the issue of choice overload—minimizing the number of apps and digital services consumers need to manage.
Certain features could make Twitter a good super app contender.
- A vast user base. It’s expected to hit 368.1 million global users this year—about 10% of social media users, per Insider Intelligence forecasts. Twitter’s user base gives it a good foundation for becoming a super app, and engaging users with value-added services would be a key component of its transition.
- Ties to commerce and payments. In March, Twitter introduced Twitter Shops, which lets merchants showcase products on their Twitter profile that customers can purchase. And it partnered with Stripe in April to test out crypto payouts for creators. These capabilities could be a pathway to developing other shopping and payment tools that can bring Twitter closer to becoming an all-in-one provider.
While Musk’s Twitter deal remains up in the air, it could be a harbinger for Twitter’s transition to a super app. But it will be a long time before the platform can develop several features—and encourage users to adopt those features—before Twitter can define itself as a super app.