Social media has made stars out of many digital content creators who are followed by millions and sought after for brand collaborations. Becoming an influencer is now trendy, appealing and rewarding. Here's how our first India's Top 100 Digital Stars list was created
Social media influences everything we do: Wake up and check the news on Twitter; take a break from work—scroll through Instagram; look for jobs—open LinkedIn; want to cook dinner—watch recipe videos on YouTube. According to Statista, Indians spend an average of 2 hours and 36 minutes a day on social media platforms. And content creators are building on this. Every day, millions of content pieces are made by thousands of creators, while new platforms and formats are being rapidly introduced.
Traditional advertising is passé; this is the era of ‘paid partnerships’ and ‘collabs’, where digital stars regularly create content for brands. From fashion creator Masoom Minawala attending Cannes 2022 for L’Oreal, to chef Shivesh Bhatia working with Borosil India, ‘influencer marketing’ is a force to reckon with. The ₹900-crore industry is pegged to grow at a CAGR of 25 percent and become a ₹2,200 crore industry by 2025, as per e4m INCA’s Influencer Marketing Report 2021. This growth is bound to help brands, creators and consumers.
Becoming an influencer might be the trendiest career right now, but it is also extremely fickle; creativity, consistency and hard work are key to success. There are many stories of creators who started with photos of their own outfits, and editing their own videos, and getting over a million followers across platforms.
Forbes India and INCA, GroupM’s brand-safe influencer and content marketing solution, have identified the top 100 digital creators, across nine categories—comedy, beauty, fashion, business & finance, fitness, food, tech, travel and social work—who are born and grow on social media, make high-quality content and demonstrate high-performance standards across average views, engagement and reach.
Comedy creators top the list, followed very closely by beauty and fashion; together they dominate 40 percent of the list. Men and women contribute equally to the list, close to 50:50, and there are two transgender individuals. Although gaming creators account for a large chunk of India’s digital stars, given the high engagement percentage, for this list we have focussed on original content creators (gamers who livestream on YouTube are not included).
(This story appears in the 29 July, 2022 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)