Popular eSports stakeholders react to Consumer affairs Ministry issuing guidelines for Social Media influencers: Consumer Affairs Ministry yesterday released endorsement guidelines for all social media influencers. A fine of Rs 10 lakh will be slapped on the offenders, which can go up to Rs 50 lakh for repeated offenders, the ministry confirmed. The influencer can even be barred from endorsing products for up to 6 years in case of repeated non-compliance with the guidelines, it further mentioned. This step has been taken very positively by the influencers. A few of them even reacted to the same. For future updates on Garena Free Fire and Free Fire MAX, follow InsideSport.IN
The social media influencer market experienced a massive surge over the last few years. The market is likely to reach from 1275 Crore in 2022 to 2800 crore by 2025 with a CAGR of almost 20%. Rohit Kumar Singh, the secretary of the Department of Consumer Affairs confirmed the above data and said, “ Social Media influencers of Substance, who have fave substantial influence or followers are more than one lakh. ”
Popular eSports stakeholders react to Consumer affairs Ministry issuing guidelines for Social Media influencers (Image via InsideSport)Popular eSports stakeholders react to Consumer affairs Ministry issuing guidelines for Social Media influencers, CHECK DETAILS
Here’s what Lokesh Jain aka Goldy and Rohit Agarwal, Founder of Alpha Zegus have to say.
Mr. Lokesh Jain, Co-Founder & COO, 8Bit Creatives, India’s leading esports consulting and talent agency which manages 50+ top gaming content creators:
How do you see this impacting the influencer ecosystem in India?
Rohit Agarwal, Founder & Director, Alpha Zegus, the next-gen marketing agency specializing in the domains of gaming & lifestyle which manages around 70 influencers:
How do you view this development?
This development has been in the works since over a year now, but it’s finally starting to materialize now. It’s good hygiene to follow since there is a definite need to draw a clear demarcation between ‘endorsed’ and ‘recommended’. At present, most influencer ads are coming across as ‘personal recommendations’ without any indication of there being a monetary advantage to the influencer behind it. This becomes unfair to the audience, and they start losing faith in their creator – since they lose track of who the influencer ‘really’ is, and what they use.
How do you see this impacting the influencer ecosystem in India?
We might see a drop in numbers (reach, engagement, etc.) for branded content, now that there will be a clear disclosure since the audience might just ‘skip the ad’ now that they know it. This might, in turn, cause a drop in creator fees for endorsements, as their fees are highly dependent on these data points. This can be avoided if the influencer finds more innovative ways to showcase the brand and make the branded content ‘enjoyable’ enough like their regular content.
So, with the transparency between influences and audiences getting better, we can expect far better eco-system growth. However, it remains to be seen how things pan out in the coming months after the announcement of these guidelines.