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INDIA’ FI RST SOCIAL MEDIA ELE CTION BY NIKHAT AZAM

India’ First Social Media Election

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India’ First Social Media Election. By Nikhat Azam. The 2014 Indian Election. Polling started April 7 th New government announced on May 16 th For 16 th Lok Sabha in India 543 seats 272 seats needed for majority Leaders in the race: Rahul Gandhi of Indian National Congress - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: India’ First Social Media Election

INDIA

’ FIR

ST SOCIA

L

MEDIA E

LECTI

ON

BY NIK

HAT A

ZAM

Page 2: India’ First Social Media Election

THE 2014 INDIAN ELECTION

• Polling started April 7th

• New government announced on May 16th

• For 16th Lok Sabha in India• 543 seats• 272 seats needed for majority

• Leaders in the race:• Rahul Gandhi of Indian National Congress• Narendra Modi of Bharatiya Janata Party

Page 3: India’ First Social Media Election

• Corruption

• Harsh working coditions

• Educational System

MAJOR ISSUES IN THE ELECTION

Page 4: India’ First Social Media Election

CANDIDATE’S OUTREACH THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA

• Arvind Kejriwal- receiving the most social media and news attention

• Kejriwal’s anti-curroption platform and appeal to the young population

Page 5: India’ First Social Media Election

CANDIDATE’S OUTREACH THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA

Page 6: India’ First Social Media Election

FACEBOOK ELECTION TRACKER

• Depicts trends of mentions of candidates on Facebook and how they are ranked according to that

• Trends analyzed through different time frames and on a linear graph

Page 7: India’ First Social Media Election

COMET SYSTEM

• COMET- Communication Plan for Election

• SMS alert system for election updates• Conduction of mock polls• Start of polling• Voting percentages every couple of hours• Number of voters

Page 8: India’ First Social Media Election

WILL SOCIAL MEDIA OUTREACH BE EFFECTIVE?• 200 million Internet users in India

• 12.6% of Indian population has presence on the internet

• People on social media include tech savvy, educated youth and interested residents from 34 to 60 years of age

Page 9: India’ First Social Media Election

SKEPTICISM

• Suhas Palshikar- political analyst and professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at the University of Pune• A waste of money

Page 10: India’ First Social Media Election
Page 11: India’ First Social Media Election

SOURCES CITEDAyres, Alyssa. "The Indian Elections: What The BJP Has To Say About Foreign Policy."

Forbes. Forbes Magazine, 7 Apr. 2014. Web. . <http://www.forbes.com/sites/alyssaayres/2014/04/07/the-indian-elections-what-the-bjp-has-to-say-about-foreign-policy/>.

Dutta, Medha . "'Election 2014 is all about social media' - The Times of India." The Times of

India. N.p., 17 Apr. 2014. Web. 20 Apr. 2014. <http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/lok-sabha-elections-2014/news/Election-2014-is-all-about-social-media/articleshow/33835014.cms>.

Khullar, Arshiya. "Politicians slug it out in India's first social media election." CNN. Cable News

Network, 10 April 2014. Web. . <http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/09/world/asia/indias-first-social-media-election/>.

Lasseter, Tom. "Five Reasons India's Elections Are More Interesting Than Yours." Bloomberg

Business Week. Bloomberg, 14 Apr. 2014. Web. . <http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-04-14/indias-elections-five-reasons-theyre-more-interesting-than-yours>.

Taylor, Adam. "What 100 days of social media can tell us about India’s election." Washington

Post. The Washington Post, 16 Apr. 2014. Web. . <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2014/04/16/what-100-days-of-social-media-can-tell-us-about-indias-election/>