Kris and his Uberfacts Team |
When Kris Sanchez joined Twitter in 2009, he didn't
expect much to come of it.
"I really started my Twitter account because I
wanted to follow Britney Spears," Sanchez told Business Insider. "I'm
a huge fan."
He found he didn't have much to tweet about in his
daily life, so he started sharing random facts he found while procrastinating
on the internet. He obviously had a knack for it. "By 2011, I had decided to start tweeting
24/7. So that's a fact every 15 minutes," he said. And thus, UberFacts was born.
In 2012, he hit 200,000 followers, including some
big names, like Paris Hilton and Khloe Kardashian. Not much later, an ad
network reached out. "They helped me see how I could actually make
money off of UberFacts, by building galleries and tweeting links," Sanchez
said. "I was getting checks of $600 or $800 a week, and I couldn't believe
it."
Today, Sanchez's Twitter account has
an astounding 9.4 million followers. The Facebook
page has more than 1.27 million likes, and the Instagram
account has more than 468,000 followers.He makes about $500,000 a year on UberFacts.
He recently launched an UberFacts app, which is
projected to eventually bring in an additional $60,000 a week. The app allows
users to like and comment on facts and share them with their friends.
Sanchez also recently hired two people to help him
look up facts and schedule tweets for the day. They generally tweet between two
and four facts from the account each hour.
"That’s what we decided works so that people
who aren’t following that many accounts aren’t flooded with UberFacts," he
said.
Sanchez's facts tend to be just unbelievable enough
to warrant a share. Last year BuzzFeed published a piece criticizing Sanchez
for tweeting questionable or incorrect facts. But Sanchez defends his strategy for verifying the
facts he tweets. "We make sure that we can find multiple
sources for each fact," he said. "Sometimes we make mistakes. Sometimes
other sites make mistakes, or one site says something's true and the other says
it's not. Having a team helps with that."
Sanchez tweets full time, but he hopes to one day
get into TV production or write a book. For now, he's working on expanding the brand's
reach.
"I never expected it would be my full-time
job," he said. "I’ve always enjoyed entertaining people. I’m hoping
that the brand brings a different kind of value to the Internet. If these
tweets can make people think, I think it does that."
Source: Business Insider
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