By:Sramana Mitra
Purnendu Chatterji intrigued me today by saying, that Bengali is the 5th largest spoken language in the world. Well, I looked it up ...
1. Mandarin: 1 Billion+
2. English: 508 Million
3. Hindi: 497 Million
4. Spanish: 392 Million
5. Russian: 277 Million
6. Arabic: 246 Million
7. Bengali: 211 Million
8. Portuguese: 191 Million
9. Malay-Indonesian: 159 Million
10. French: 129 Million
Here are the languages that just barely missed the list (from the most popular to the least): German, Japanese, Urdu, Punjabi, Korean, Telugu, Tamil, Marathi, Cantonese, Wu, Vietnamese, Javanese, Italian, Turkish, Tagalog, and Thai.
Why do we care?
Because, the Media industry is moving online, and a question that is looming large: what other languages besides the obvious ones like Mandarin, need major Internet presence? The list above starts to provide some indicators ...
Key question to answer: Which of these languages have sustainable (a) Internet Presence (b) Online Advertising Pull behind them?
Today, English, Mandarin, French, and Spanish have traction. German and Italian also have some Internet presence.
Big languages like Hindi and Bengali, by virtue of the fact that they belong to a largely bilingual population that is fluent in English - have little adoption.
Even online advertising dollars are largely limited to North American target audiences, with a small bit of traction in the UK and Western Europe. No one wants to advertise to audiences in Brazil or Russia.
It would be interesting to watch how the game changes in the next decade.
Purnendu Chatterji intrigued me today by saying, that Bengali is the 5th largest spoken language in the world. Well, I looked it up ...
1. Mandarin: 1 Billion+
2. English: 508 Million
3. Hindi: 497 Million
4. Spanish: 392 Million
5. Russian: 277 Million
6. Arabic: 246 Million
7. Bengali: 211 Million
8. Portuguese: 191 Million
9. Malay-Indonesian: 159 Million
10. French: 129 Million
Here are the languages that just barely missed the list (from the most popular to the least): German, Japanese, Urdu, Punjabi, Korean, Telugu, Tamil, Marathi, Cantonese, Wu, Vietnamese, Javanese, Italian, Turkish, Tagalog, and Thai.
Why do we care?
Because, the Media industry is moving online, and a question that is looming large: what other languages besides the obvious ones like Mandarin, need major Internet presence? The list above starts to provide some indicators ...
Key question to answer: Which of these languages have sustainable (a) Internet Presence (b) Online Advertising Pull behind them?
Today, English, Mandarin, French, and Spanish have traction. German and Italian also have some Internet presence.
Big languages like Hindi and Bengali, by virtue of the fact that they belong to a largely bilingual population that is fluent in English - have little adoption.
Even online advertising dollars are largely limited to North American target audiences, with a small bit of traction in the UK and Western Europe. No one wants to advertise to audiences in Brazil or Russia.
It would be interesting to watch how the game changes in the next decade.
Article Source: http://www.redsofts.com/articles/
Silicon Valley Entrepreneur and Strategy Consultant Sramana Mitra writes about Entrepreneurship, Business Strategy, Emerging Technology, Market Moves, and sundry other topics in her Blog "Sramana Mitra on Strategy". Read more of her writings at http://www.sramanamitra.com.
More Articles from Internet Category:
What In The World Is Cpanel And Why Do I Want It?
Tips To Help You Make Money Through Online Surveys
Earning Money On The Internet
How To Select Online Cash Paid Survey Sites?
Tips on How to Profit Online Easily
Is It True That You Will Get Paid For Survey?
Your Roadmap to Guaranteed Internet Success
The Importance Of Linking, Link Popularity Plus Tag And Ping
Can Language Be Taught Over the Internet?
I Want To Shop On The Internet, What Tips Should I Know Before I Shop?
Powerful Podcasting
The Secret to Generating Exponential Traffic Growth
eBay Tips
How to Quickly and Easily Distribute Your Free Content
Secrets to Easily Building Opt-In Lists
|