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THE NEXT BIG BIRD IN TOWN: CAN INDIA’S KOO SUCCEED IN REPLACING TWITTER?

Since Elon Musk took over Twitter, things have been chaotic at the social media platform — with sudden feature announcements and pullbacks, mass layoffs, resignations en masse, and an exodus of users.

Many Twitter users are looking for alternatives amid this commotion, with Mastodon already emerging as a worthy competitor. India’s microblogging platform Koo is also emerging as an option for more users and trying to position itself as the next Twitter should the now Elon Musk-controlled platform crash and burn, as unlikely as that may seem.

We look closely at Koo and how it’s expanding its user base worldwide.

All about Koo

Koo, which caters primarily to non-English users, was launched in early 2020 by entrepreneurs Aprameya Radhakrishna and Mayank Bidwatka.

It rose in prominence after winning the government’s Atmanirbhar App Innovation Challenge, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi mentioned it in his Mann ki Baat address.

However, it grew significantly in 2021 when the Centre was embroiled in a struggle with Twitter over blocking specific accounts. Soon after, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, then Law & IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, Members of Parliament Tejasvi Surya and Shobha Karandlaje, former Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa, Isha Foundation’s Jaggi Vasudev and former cricketers Javagal Srinath and Anil Kumble joined the platform.

Moreover, the Union IT ministry, India Post, and Niti Aayog created accounts on the platform.

Since then, the social media networking site has clocked 50 million downloads, claiming to become the second-largest microblogging platform in the world.

Interestingly, both platforms are similar — they are meant for quick takes, and both have verified user accounts. However, the distinguishing factor between the two is that Koo allows users to use their KYC document to self-verify for a green tick and gives celebrities and VIP users “yellow ticks of eminence.”

Expanding user base

Since the launch of Koo, which prides itself on supporting non-English languages, its user base has grown — a whopping 50 million downloads in this year itself — and recently, the microblogging platform was launched in Brazil with support for the Portuguese language.

According to a statement made by Koo, it was downloaded over a million times within two days in Brazil alone.

The post read: “Just 20 percent of the world speaks English. Eighty percent of the world speaks a language native to its land. Most global products have a broken experience in languages. Nobody has created a language-immersive experience for expressing and connecting with the world… We saw a gap that could be addressed in the whole world. This is the insight behind Koo.”

Since launching, “Koo has recently witnessed two million Koos (or posts) and 10 million likes within 48 hours by users in Brazil alone.”

Koo was also launched in Nigeria in June last year after Twitter was indefinitely suspended in the country. Within hours of its launch, the Government of Nigeria had joined Koo.

The Bengaluru-based microblogging platform has also announced plans to expand to the United States, with Aprameya Radhakrishna, the co-founder, and chief executive of Koo, saying, “This is our moment!”

 

Not just the US, but the co-founders also plan to take the app to Indonesia, Bangladesh, Malaysia, the Philippines, the Middle East, and Africa.

Twitter’s loss, Koo’s gain

Interestingly, the turmoil at Twitter has also been attributed to Koo’s growing performance, with Aprameya being quoted as telling CNBCTV18 that there’s been an influx of users since Musk’s Twitter takeover.

“With the changes happening at Twitter, we did see a spike in new user acquisition. It’s been higher than usual. People around the world are looking for alternatives to Twitter. We are in the best position to fill this void,” Aprameya told CNBCTV18.com.

Additionally, the homegrown platform is also planning to make use of the workforce laid off by Twitter.

In a recent tweet, Koo’s co-founder Mayank Bidawatka said the company is planning to hire some former employees of Twitter as his company keeps expanding. He said the employees who lost jobs “deserve to work where their talent is valued.”

 

Koo’s growing strategy

Koo’s main selling point and what has attracted such a user base is that the platform allows people to use their local language to communicate. “People express their views freely on Twitter and Instagram, but it’s mostly in English, and those who don’t know the language find it tough to do so. Hence, working on an India-first approach made sense, and that’s how we put out our first version of the app, with localization as our key focus,” Radhakrishna said.

Also, while Twitter struggles with the $8 Twitter Blue plan, which has been ridiculed and criticized by many, Koo has vowed free verification for life.

All in all, it seems now’s the time to ‘koo’ rather than to tweet.

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