The three American social media
giants - Facebook, Twitter and Google - have emerged as a major player in the
ongoing general elections in India, with political parties and candidates
competing with each other in breaking the news, spreading their message through
these outlets in addition to those via the traditional media.
While the impact of these social
media on the elections could be known only after May 16 when the results are
declared or could be a matter of another academic research, all the three major
players have seen substantial increase in their India traffic and usage.
For instance Facebook has now 100
million users in India, its largest outside the US, while that of Twitter has
more than doubled since January this year.
After the 7th round of polling,
there were 49 million Indian elections-related conversations on Twitter -- more
than double the 20 million Indian elections-related conversations on Twitter
for all of 2013.
In 2009, Sashi Tharoor was the only
Indian politician to have a Twitter account and had 6,000 followers. Five years
later there is hardly any major political leader who does not have an account
on the micro-blogging site.
Tharoor is now the second most
popular politician on Twitter with 2.16 million followers, after Narendra Modi the BJP's prime ministerial
candidate with 3.89 million followers.
Modi now also has nearly 14 million
fans of Facebook.
Barack Obama is the only other
politician to have more Facebook fans than Modi.
With political parties, leaders and
candidates putting their advertisement on social media to reach out to their
voters, all the three major players are reported to have made substantial
addition to their revenue.
Though none of the companies are
willing to discuss the advertisement revenue this election cycle, all of them
have put in several months of tireless efforts and diverted substantial amount
of their resources in the elections, many of them working thousands of miles
away from India.
Facebook started working on the
Indian elections towards the end of last year, says Katie Harbath, manager for
Policy at Facebook, adding that the company started doing a series of things
beginning March this year when the elections were announced.
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