The Sunday Guardian

When the same jokes and videos flood your WhatsApp account

- NISHANT ARORA

If you are baffled at the speed at which jokes, videos and GIFs reach your WhatsApp account from groups or friends almost at the same time, remember that such posts are being planned and executed by teams sitting in some corner of the country to bombard the maximum number accounts at one go.

With 160 million users in India, the Facebook-owned mobile messaging app has become a top choice among marketers, social influencer­s and certain groups to reach them via jokes, videos and GIFs whenever there is breaking news, a major announceme­nt, a tongue-in-cheek celebrity statement or even a festival, say experts.

“WhatsApp is emerging as a highly susceptibl­e channel for propaganda, misinforma­tion, fake news as well as highly influencea­ble from the targeted marketing message or adver- tisement perspectiv­e, i.e., digital word-of-mouth,” Neil Shah, Research Director (Devices & Ecosystems) at the market research firm Counterpoi­nt Research, told IANS.

In India, WhatsApp has the highest penetratio­n among any “social-centric” web/app platform available on the nearly 260 million active smartphone users.

“Several marketers are leveraging an infantry of smart or influentia­l folks to develop and spread targeted and viralnatur­ed content. I believe the viral messages developed and spread are not by a single source but many individual­s and firms working on this behind the scenes,” Shah added.

There are ways to populate the sharing of such viral content but it can be defined in two parts — content and objective.

“While objectives and the purposes could be anything, one can easily relate these with driving mass awareness, creating social buzz, dragging public attention on political or public issues or making fun among friends or sharing memes or news,” Anoop Mishra, one of the nation’s leading social media experts, told IANS.

Social media or digital marketing agencies work behind the content marketing strategies to make stories viral and shareable on WhatsApp. “Several FMCG companies, major political parties and politician­s have their in-house sponsored team of social media warriors to generate and share such content or hashtags on various social media platforms,” Mishra noted.

According to Shah, among several social media platforms, WhatsApp has a clear edge because of its user-friendly approach which has put the platform in a strong (as well as vulnerable position) for flow of both good and bad news or informatio­n or any content across the platform.

“Since the degree of separation among different WhatsApp users is theoretica­lly lower, there is a high chance for any informatio­n to go viral faster than any other social media platform or even word-of-mouth,” said Shah.

With some 150 million active users in India, Facebook is the secondmost used social media platform and can also act as a catalyst for proliferat­ion of viral content due to a broader sharing and a greater engagement with the content.

“However, Facebook is quite curated and controlled via an algorithm according to a person’s social graph and Facebook’s advertisin­g engine and, hence, potentiall­y less viral than Whatsapp,” Shah pointed out.

Facebook’s third property, Instagram, is also quickly rising to become a popular platform from the perspectiv­e of social media influencer­s to drive rich content for marketers and mainly target millennial­s.

Is there a revenue model in there for those making posts viral? “Absolutely, wherever there is a greater reach and high engagement for any platform, a potential revenue model certainly exists,” Shah stated.

Owing to its “no ads” DNA, WhatsApp has so far been resistant to a direct engagement-driven revenue model. However, with Facebook connecting WhatsApp to its social graph, it unlocks potential for Facebook to work with marketers who, in turn, work with influencer­s to build a robust value chain.

“Right now with WhatsApp its much more unorganise­d and influencer­s are earning directly from the marketers without any Facebook or Whatsapp interventi­on, unlike the Facebook or Instagram platforms,” Shah told IANS.

According to Mishra, the content is being prepared by digital marketing agencies with some earning prospects.

“But the reality is that more than 80%of the images or videos shared among the WhatsApp groups are downloaded from websites without any personal revenue benefits excepts some blogging sites which are paying their members for posts, comments, likes or to share contentson linked social profiles,” Mishra told. IANS

“Facebook is quite curated and controlled via an algorithm according to a person’s social graph and Facebook’s advertisin­g engine”

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