Somewhere in the steamy streets of Dhaka an earnest posse of veiled women and young men are busily becoming admirers of a bevvy of stars and businesses around the world.
They are employees of what are euphemistically termed 'click farms'; a sort of agricultural production line of fake 'Likes' that pepper Twitter, Facebook and other social media.
In the good old days we had automated bots that did this job and social media companies such as Google waged a war to counter the automated trend. To a certain extent they won the battle, but the fake brigade still smelt money and re-focused their operations on human keyboard-tappers instead.
While the capital of Bangladesh, Dhaka, is a recognised hub for click farms so are other places such as Cairo and Indonesia. It is no coincidence that these centres are located in countries where workers get paid a pittance.
The Guardian reports:
"For the workers, though, it is miserable work, sitting at screens in dingy rooms facing a blank wall, with windows covered by bars, and sometimes working through the night. For that, they could have to generate 1,000 likes or follow 1,000 people on Twitter to earn a single US dollar."
Another dubious example is Shareyt, whose owner Sharaf al-Nomani, told the same newspaper that: "around 30% or 40% of the clicks will come from Bangladesh". The Guardian equated this statistic to 25,000 people in Dhaka repetitively punching their computer keyboards, hour after hour, to enhance the visibility of a client's product or service.
The Guardian reports:
"For the workers, though, it is miserable work, sitting at screens in dingy rooms facing a blank wall, with windows covered by bars, and sometimes working through the night. For that, they could have to generate 1,000 likes or follow 1,000 people on Twitter to earn a single US dollar."
Another dubious example is Shareyt, whose owner Sharaf al-Nomani, told the same newspaper that: "around 30% or 40% of the clicks will come from Bangladesh". The Guardian equated this statistic to 25,000 people in Dhaka repetitively punching their computer keyboards, hour after hour, to enhance the visibility of a client's product or service.
But these sweatshop conditions doesn't seem to deter well known clients; some of which may surprise you.
For example, the USA State Department recently had its knuckles rapped for spending US$630,000 to boost its Facebook fan following. Most of these new fans came from Cairo, which given the current political sensitivities has an aura of the absurd.
For example, the USA State Department recently had its knuckles rapped for spending US$630,000 to boost its Facebook fan following. Most of these new fans came from Cairo, which given the current political sensitivities has an aura of the absurd.
There is nothing covert about click farm companies and the 'Likes' they generate are quite genuine, in the sense that a human being created the action. Take a company such as WeSellLikes.com. Its domain name choice is clearly not attempting to mask its activities. If I was so inclined I could buy 10,000 'real worldwide likes' for less than $US100.
Practical yes, ethical...barely. So why do businesses indulge in such activities?.
The greatest motivation is fear. Fear that their enterprise will look pathetic with its 200 genuine Facebook Likes compared to Competitor X down the road who has 10,000. A common belief is that customer perception of their brand might be adversely affected by such a discrepancy in numbers.
While there may be an element of truth in this assumption (according to research 31% will check out reviews, ratings, likes and followers before buying), buying 1 million twitter followers from an Indonesian web entrepreneur for $US600 for your farmhouse cheese brand, isn't necessarily going to solve your online marketing woes.
Customers are becoming increasingly aware of the ruse and the more savvy they become, the less effective these click farms buy-ins will be.
But one business often begets another. Click Auditors are the new breed, with London's Status People being one such service provider. They assist companies to block out the fakes for as little as $US5.50 per month.
The real trouble for a business begins when you start to believe your own marketing hype and strategically plan based on false social media analysis. I would like to say that such folly does not exist but regrettably it does.
Of course this being a genuine blog post I would welcome genuine 'Likes' and 'Followers' - although it is highly doubtful that Mr Sharaf al-Nomani, will do so personally.
Reference:
The real trouble for a business begins when you start to believe your own marketing hype and strategically plan based on false social media analysis. I would like to say that such folly does not exist but regrettably it does.
Of course this being a genuine blog post I would welcome genuine 'Likes' and 'Followers' - although it is highly doubtful that Mr Sharaf al-Nomani, will do so personally.
Reference:
- How low-paid workers at 'click farms' create appearance of online popularity - The Guardian
- 4 Ways Click Farms Screw Your Business - Inc
- Click farms are the new sweatshops - The Washington Post
- Selling social media clicks becomes big business - San Jose Mercury News
- 1000 fake followers for US$10 - NZ Herald
- State Department bureau spent $630,000 on Facebook 'likes' - Washington Examiner
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