Twitter Gives Businesses Square Profile Pics, Will Start Charging Them for Verified Check-Mark
Elon Musk’s Twitter, eager for a new source of revenue, will soon begin charging a subscription fee for businesses to retain their verified status — and the social network has introduced new square profile pictures for companies and brands on the platform, replacing the long-standing circular format.
The Twitter Blue for Business service is “a new way for businesses and their affiliates to verify and distinguish themselves on Twitter,” the company announced Monday. Going forward, the gold check-mark that Twitter began applying to businesses last week will be available only to accounts that subscribe to Twitter Blue for Business.
Related Stories
VIP+Packed Holiday Box Office Speaks to Misguided Scheduling Strategies
Tom Holland Says Christopher Nolan Movie Offer Was the 'Phone Call of a Lifetime' and 'Reminiscent of Spider-Man 10 Years Ago': 'I'm Super Proud'
Twitter did not announce pricing for Twitter Blue for Business. The company said it currently is piloting Blue for Business with a “select group of businesses”; in 2023, Twitter said it will roll out the service more widely. Musk has said that within the next several months, Twitter will remove all legacy verified check-marks — so that eventually only paying individual and corporate customers will have verified status.
Popular on Variety
The announcement comes as company-watchers are waiting to see whether Musk will make good on his pledge to step down as CEO based on the results of an ad-hoc poll he posted Sunday asking users whether he should step down as head of Twitter. A majority (57.5%) voted “yes.”
There’s a sense of urgency for Musk, who incurred billions in debt to swing the $44 billion takeover of Twitter, to generate subscription revenue for the company. Many advertisers have pulled back or halted their spending on Twitter amid Musk’s chaotic changes in the last two months, which have included slashing headcount and unilaterally deciding to reinstate accounts (including Donald Trump’s) that had been banned under previous management.
Twitter last week relaunched Twitter Blue, the subscription service for individuals that includes a blue check-mark, with new measures to prevent the deluge of impersonators that flooded the service and caused widespread confusion when Musk first mandated the Twitter Blue revamp last month. Twitter Blue costs $8 per month purchased on the web and $11 per month through Apple’s iOS.
“As a Twitter Blue for Business subscriber, a company can link any number of their affiliated individuals, businesses and brands to their account,” Twitter said in a blog post. Blue for Business customers can designate affiliated accounts — such as employees, brands and even “movie characters” — which will get a small badge of their parent company’s profile picture next to their blue or gold check-mark.
In addition, Twitter on Monday said that alongside the blue and gold check-marks, it is applying gray check-marks to governmental and intergovernmental accounts.
New VIP+ Analysis: Why There Are Too Few Twitter Quitters
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
‘Twisters’ Gets Peacock Streaming Release Date
Why Samsung’s FAST Platform Could Be Poised for Its Breakout Moment
‘Law & Order: Organized Crime’ Season 5 Casts Olivia Thirlby (EXCLUSIVE)
Peacock Readies Streaming ‘Kornacki Cam’ for Election Night
Entertainment Everywhere: A Special Report
‘Days of Our Lives’ Renewed for Season 61 at Peacock
Most Popular
Anna Kendrick Was Terrified to Act With George Clooney on ‘Up in the Air’ Until He Told Her on Set: ‘I Get Insecure. Did They Even Hire the Right…
Grammy Nominations 2025: Beyonce Leads With 11 Nods as Taylor Swift, Chappell Roan, Sabrina Carpenter and Charli XCX Are Among Top Nominees
Ridley Scott Says Joaquin Phoenix Got Cold Feet on ‘Gladiator’ and Said ‘I Can’t Do It’; Then Russell Crowe Called It ‘Terribly Unprofessional…
Ray Romano’s Identical Twin Sons Confront Their Quarter-Life Crisis, Codependency and Growing Up With a Famous Dad in Their New Documentary
Tony Todd, ‘Candyman’ and ‘Final Destination’ Star, Dies at 69
Jimmy Kimmel Responds to Elon Musk Calling Him a ‘Propaganda Puppet’: ‘Listen Kermit, You Bought Twitter’
16-Year-Old Josh Brolin Tried to Make His ‘Goonies’ Character Super Deep; Then Steven Spielberg Told Him: ‘Just Act. Just Say What’s on the Page…
Denis Villeneuve Says ‘I Don’t Care’ If Quentin Tarantino Refuses to Watch ‘Dune,’ but ‘What I Did Was Not a Remake … I See This as an Original…
Nicholas Hoult Heard on the Radio That Robert Pattinson Was Batman and ‘I Was Auditioning Next Weekend’; Losing Role Was an ‘Emotional Blow…
Taylor Sheridan’s ‘1923’ to Air on Paramount Network Beginning in December (TV News Roundup)
Must Read
- Film
COVER | ‘Is the Sperm Still in There?’: Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey on Making ‘Queer’
By Andrew Wallenstein 5 days
- Film
The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time
- Biz
Hollywood's New Leaders of 2024
- Music
15 Best Samples of Quincy Jones' Music, From Kanye West to the Weeknd to Harry Styles
- TV
Marvel's 2025 TV Slate Revealed, Including First Looks at ‘Wonder Man,’ Animated 'Spider-Man' and 'Wakanda' Shows
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN%2Bjp2goKGklrlwusSwqmisp57BtbHRZpmlrZVis7C%2BjJusrKGemsC0sdJmqqqtkaeybrzRqJ2ipJVivaqv0matnqqZm7amsIxqaWxtZGuCeIOXaA%3D%3D