City
Epaper

How virtual campaign generates jobs for youth

By IANS | Updated: February 12, 2022 10:30 IST

Lucknow, Feb 12 The elections in Uttar Pradesh have created job opportunities, albeit temporary, for youth who are ...

Open in App

Lucknow, Feb 12 The elections in Uttar Pradesh have created job opportunities, albeit temporary, for youth who are tech-savvy.

With the focus on virtual campaigning, majority of the candidates are hiring young people who can push their campaign on the social media.

Most of the cyber-smart campaigners are either in college or just out of college.

Samarth Gupta, an undergraduate, has been hired on a two-month contract by a candidate in Lucknow.

"The candidate wanted to hire me for one month because polling in Lucknow will be over on February 23 but I insisted on a two-month contract and he agreed. All I have to do is to post photographs of his campaign, create some slogans and retweet the posts of top leaders," he said.

Samarth is being paid a sum of Rs 40,000 per month.

Shalini Awasthi, who has done her Master's in public administration, is working for a woman candidate from the BJP and is being paid Rs 50,000 for one month.

"Working for a BJP candidate is much easier because the party's IT cell provides a lot of content and I only need to retweet it or forward and share it. I also make sure that my client gets photographed well during her campaign-I sometimes accompany her- and she is projected in a favourable light. So far, we have avoided commenting on contentious issues because we are also targeting the floating voters," she explained and added that special videos are also being made for Instagram accounts of her client.

There is a greater demand for youth who are well versed in English too because that takes care of a bilingual campaign.

Shashwat Banerjee, an MBA student, has landed an assignment for social media management simply because he is a Bengali and knows the language.

"There are a large number of Bengalis in the constituency of my client and he wants all his social media posts to be posted in Bengali too. Therefore, I post the contest in English, Hindi and Bengali which endears him to Bengali voters," he said.

His numeration is also higher, Rs 65,000 for a month.

Candidates contesting from rural Assembly constituencies are mostly focussing on SMS.

"Since a large population in the rural interiors does not have smart phones, we are not wasting time and money on Facebook and Instagram. Instead, we are sending out catchy SMS message and are also encouraging people to reply so that we can get feedback," said Sonu Kureel, an intermediate student who is working for a local BSP candidate in Sultanpur.

Interestingly, most of the youth working in this virtual campaign for candidates, do not necessarily subscribe to the same ideology.

"This is business and I do not belong to the same ideology as my client. But it is a job and I am doing it well," said Shalini.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Shalini AwasthiShashwat banerjeebjpInstagramTwitter and instagramInstagram and twitterFacebook-owned instagramInstagram for androidInstaInstagram postSocial media interface
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: BJP Leader Prasad Lad’s Letterhead and AI Voice Forged to Secure Rs 3.60 Crore; Yuva Morcha Leader Booked

MaharashtraLadki Bahin Yojana: Rs 4,800 Crore Scam Exposed, Supriya Sule Drops Bombshell — How Did Men Receive Benefits?

NationalBengaluru: Three Women Followed and Chased by Men, Share Shocking Video

NashikSunil Bagul, Mama Rajwade Join BJP in Nashik Ahead of Municipal Elections 2025

NationalUttarakhand Student Accuses Instagram Friend of 3-Year Sexual Exploitation Under Marriage Promise

National Realted Stories

NationalKarti Chidambaram backs India's firm rebuttal to Trump's tariff move

NationalOdisha to set up 835 model primary schools in first phase of flagship scheme

NationalHow US encouraged India to buy Russian oil to stabilise global energy markets

NationalDelhi Crime: Girl Shot Dead Inside Doctor’s Clinic in Jahangirpuri; Attacker on the Run

NationalCong's Manish Tewari invokes 1971 to counter US tariff move on India