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Thursday, 21 November 2013
Biz - Google !
Google sets itself a tough goal: Get 50
million women online!
"Internet ke liye koi madat chahiye toh
hum hai na..."
That is a pretty strange welcoming statement
for any helpline. But then this is not any
helpline. This is the first helpline set up to
help women go online. One that starts at the
very basics, asking if you know how to
switch on a computer.
For the first time anywhere in the world,
Google has started an initiative to get more
women online. There is a strong reason for
starting the project from India. Of the 200
million internet users in what is poised to
become the second largest Internet market in
the world, just about 30 per cent are woman.
The Help Women Go Online initiative being
pushed by Google hopes to correct this
gender imbalance by getting 50 million
women online in the next 12 months.
Yonca Brunini, who leads Tech for Good for
Google, accepts that it is a tough challenge
given the culture. "They don't see a reason to
go online and they don't have access. But it
is an audacious , yet worthy goal," she said at
the launch event in India. There will have to
be content that is local gives women a reason
to go online, and there will have to be more
affordable devices like smartphone that let
them do so, she added.
"We have no commercial goal in doing this.
This is not a problem specific to India, but
the scale of it here is large," she said, adding
that the project will for sure improve the
economic status of those who are impacted.
But Debjani Ghosh, managing director of
Intel South Asia, puts things in perspective
by quoting a recent Ernst Young study that
puts women as the second largest market
after emerging countries.
Google has already tested the project in
Rajasthan's Bhilwara town where it exposed
1,00,000 women to the Internet for the first
time. "The project ran for three months and
covered the town as well as 50 villages
around it," explains Sandeep Menon, Google's
country marketing manager. It was a
learning experience for Google too. "When I
explained to them the concept of e-
commerce, they wanted to know if they
could order fodder sitting at home using
their newly found tool," adds Neha, a young
local trainer for the pilot project.
Menon says the problem is three-pronged.
"There is a lack of knowledge, awareness and
access. That is what we are trying to tackle at
different levels," he says. Google has roped in
Intel, Hindustan Unilever and Axis Bank as
partners and all are chipping in with
different types of help to achieve the 50
million goal.
While mobile will be the primary access
point for most first time female users, Google
is also exploring the feasibility of using its
own devices to give access. "Women don't
want to go to cyber cafes as they are not
considered to be safe," explains Menon.
"Now there is no compelling reason for them
to go online," explains Rajan Anandan, Vice
President & Managing Director, Google India.
That could come in the form of local content
relevant to them, as well as success stories of
people who have made it big thanks to the
Internet. For first time users, Google has
already set up a website, hwgo.com, to help
with the basics.
National Innovation Council chairman Sam
Pitroda says this inclusion of women in the
digital revolution is imperative. "They have a
lot of answers to our problems. We need
them to make the online conversations more
relevant."
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