Bring your buddies. Helo, ShareChat will pay you
As vernacular social media battle heats up, rivals are prepared to offer money for downloads.

This comes at a time of increased competition in India’s social media and content landscape as Indian, Chinese and American applications battle to win the so-called next one billion internet users in the world’s last large untapped internet market.
Helo will transfer Rs 10 and Share-Chat will offer Rs 15 through payments application Paytm, for every new user they get via referrals.
ShareChat users will also get a scratch card with a chance to win more money, while Helo is promising to give additional cash if the referred user engages more deeply on its platform. Both the applications are available in 14-15 languages.
After short-video application TikTok’s runaway success in India, ByteDance wants Helo to be the go-to app for small towns and villages. Helo competes with domestic startup ShareChat, which accused the Chinese app of copying its design and infringing on copyright last year. The court disposed of the case after Helo made changes to its design.

ShareChat declined to comment on its referral programme. Helo has about 50 million monthly active users in India, while ShareChat has about 45 million as of March-end. Helo was launched just one year ago, compared to ShareChat, which was founded in 2015.
“We recognise that driving user growth in a highly competitive market like India, where user behaviour changes from state to state and a constant demand for a platform like Helo to bridge the information gap for regional language users does not entail a one-sizefits-all approach,” the Helo spokesperson added.
Around 90% of new internet users in India are not proficient in English, according to Google’s former executive Rajan Anandan.
Paying for referrals leads to more downloads, but it may not be the most effective way to find continued engagement — the most important metric for possible advertisers on social media platforms. In the past, Uber and Ola have used references to acquire more customers on their platform in India.
“We’ve seen that the entertainment value, usefulness and access to a user’s network of connections are necessary to sustain and grow monetisable time spent. Paying for referrals is a short-term strategy and is susceptible to fraud,” Taylor added.
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