PM Modi deployed an army of supporters over Twitter and Facebook during his successful election campaign. He has put both the microblogging site and Facebook at the centre of his government's media and research strategies since taking office a month ago and has asked ministers and lawmakers to follow suit. The 63-year-old's focus on social media presents opportunities for the companies, which see India as one of their top growth markets and are sending senior executives to forge relationships with the government. With five million followers, PM Modi is the fourth most followed world leader on Twitter. He has 18.8 million Facebook likes.
Twitter has been given direct access to ministers and their staff, advising them on social media usage, as well as organising workshops to train ambassadors and other diplomats, said Raheel Khursheed, head of news, politics and government at Twitter India.
Though India has the world's third-largest Internet user base after the United States and China, just 13.7 per cent of the population had access to the Internet in 2013, according to consulting firm eMarketer. By 2018 more than a quarter of population is forecast to be on the Web. Markets outside North America account for roughly 84 per cent of Facebook's 1.28 billion monthly users but account for a fraction of revenue.
"In terms of revenues (India) is minimal. Mostly it is skewed towards US. But soon marketers will realise how Facebook can help increase engagement for their brands," said Neil Shah of Counterpoint Technology Market Research.
Facebook says it has more than 100 million active users in India and Twitter has 40 million users. Those numbers are seen growing rapidly as Internet penetration and smartphone ownership grows over the next few years.
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