The fact that the BJP has been outscoring its rivals on social media is well-documented, but the latest figures released by Facebook show the party is also out-spending them significantly. Recently, FB published an 바카라Ad Library report바카라, a database that 바카라includes ads related to politics and issues of national importance바카라, as an effort to increase 바카라transparency바카라. So how and where does it stack up?
Well, some 900 million Indians will vote in the polls of 2019. And data portal Statista estimates 294 million Indians have FB accounts바카라even if not all are of voting age, this approaches one-third, a huge subset, all of 2014바카라s winning voteshare in fact.


The numbers boggle the mind. Out of the 2,500 pages FB listed data for, 35 pages had spent over Rs 1 lakh between February 7 and March 2, barely a month. Of these 35 pages, 19 are affiliated with the BJP and the central government and have spent Rs 2.48 crore out of the total Rs 3.30 crore. In comparison, the only pro-Congress page in the top 35, Karnataka Towards Development (rank 11), spent Rs 6.2 lakh.
How does all this pan out? 바카라A post can be boosted into an ad, though ads without a disclaimer are stopped by Facebook after some time,바카라 Mayur Khatwani, a digital marketer, tells Outlook. He explaINS that a post reaches about 2.5 per cent followers 바카라organically바카라, but 바카라when you put in money, the post starts reaching both followers and non-followers on FB. You can define an audience and reach out to them, even if they don't follow you. For Rs 90 you get 1,000 impressions, not unique ones though,바카라 he adds. Impressions are counted when a post is seen by a user scrolling on his/her timeline.
The top spender in the list, the pro-BJP 바카라Bharat Ke Mann Ki Baat바카라 (BKMKB), spent over Rs 1.2 crore in the period. (The top directly Congress-affiliated page in the list, 바카라Amethi Rae Bareli ki Kahani바카라, ranks 48 and spent only Rs 78,306.) Now, BKMKB did not even exist before January 27, but already has 3.05 lakh followers at the time of writing, raking in an average of 7,094 a day. With an average spend of Rs 7,700 per ad, every post on the page would reach 85,000-plus accounts, according to the metric. 바카라Nation with NaMo바카라, the second-biggest spender at over Rs 64 lakh, which has been around since June 2013, has close to 1.3 million followers.
A digital marketer who wishes to remain anonymous says he spent Rs 13 lakh over 10 days for a campaign, and managed to reach over one crore FB users. 바카라By that metric, these guys are playing in crores. I don바카라t think these are verified pages because legit ones are not allowed to run their sort of campaigns,바카라 he says.
The crucial role of social media this time was evident in the barrage of questions lobbed at the CEC on a Sunday afternoon, and his response on social media platforms deploying fact-checkers to scan fake news. 바카라A lot of spending is done by non-affiliate pages and it바카라s difficult for the EC to track them바카라most fake news and divisive content comes from them," says Shivam Shankar Singh, a political consultant who has worked with the BJP and written an account of that in his new book, How to Win an Indian Election.
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- Bharat Ke Mann Ki Baat Ran without disclaimer 1,01,60,240 Rupees spent for 1,168 ads
- Nation with NaMo Ran without disclaimer 52,24,296 Rupees spent for 631 ads
- MyGov India Ran without disclaimer 25,27,349 Rupees spent for 114 ads
- Dailyhunt App Dailyhunt App Ran without disclaimer Rupees 22,19,395 Spent for 14 Ads
- Bharat Ke Mann Ki Baat Ran with disclaimer Rupees 18,47,555 Spent for 388 Ads
- Nation with NaMo Ran with disclaimer Rupees 11,86,079 Spent for 443 Ads
- Dailyhunt Ran without disclaimer Rupees 10,94,011 Spent for 2 Ads
- Great Learning Ran without disclaimer Rupees 10,87,656 Spent for 16 Ads
- MyGov India Ran with disclaimer (pvt sponsor) Rupees 9,13,786 Spent for 9 Ads
- Bharatiya Janata Party Ran with disclaimer Rupees 6,60,404 Spent for 2 Ads