Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Leaving aggression behind, AAP adds wit to its tweets

- Jatin Gandhi jatin.gandhi@hindustant­imes.com

CHANGING STRATEGY, PARTY’S SOCIAL MEDIA TEAM NOW POSTS A CARTOON ON ISSUES AFFECTING THE PEOPLE EACH MORNING

NEW DELHI: The Aam Aadmi Party’s official Twitter handle (@aamaadmipa­rty) added its last one million followers on the social media site over just four months. In contrast, the first three million (it had 4.07 million followers at 5pm on Saturday) were added over four and a half years, pointing to a sharp spike in the party’s online following.

Party strategist­s admit the spike has come after AAP toned down its aggression and attacks on PM Narendra Modi as part of its new social media strategy.

“Everyone knows Arvind Kejriwal is not fond of Narendra Modi, there is no point stating it every day,” said Arvind Jha — an old associate of the Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal — who manages the social media cell of the party along with its founder Ankit Lal. “Instead we are now focusing on the achievemen­ts of the Kejriwal government in Delhi...Manish Sisodia’s work in the education sector needs to be highlighte­d.”

The aggression has been replaced by humour and satire. Every morning, party’s social media team posts a cartoon on an issue concerning the people.

“We found that using cartoons and posting them without a comment has greater appeal. Even those who are not politicall­y inclined towards AAP retweet the cartoons if they find them relevant,” said a social media team strategist. “Several times, the images of these cartoons get circulated on Whatsapp. AAP doesn’t find mention but our message is getting across.”

While party leaders say they are still evolving the strategy and it is being implemente­d as they go along, marked changes are already visible. Apart from a regular dose of cartoons, the team also tweets the achievemen­ts of the AAP’s ‘Delhi model of governance’.

The AAP media cell recently held a meeting of social media volunteers from five southern states in Bengaluru, where it decided to form a central team that will not be based in Delhi but spread across the states.

“We have already been providing raw content to the state units who tweet it after translatin­g it in the local language. That is giving us a lot of traction outside Delhi,” a senior member of the central team who attended the two-day event said.

The party launched its account on Instagram a day before Diwali. In the last 24 hours, it has posted pictures of its leaders — from Kejriwal having dinner with four AAP volunteers on Diwali to Sanjay Singh sharing sweets with the poor and Kumar Vishwas holding a small meet at home. The party’s attempt is to present its softer side.

“As a party we generate lots of photos every day. The idea is to reach out on another platform that is now popular with the youth,” said Lal.

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