If you ever wondered how powerful social media can be then the proof may be in the (Christmas) pudding if Rage against the Machine can make it to the UK Christmas number one spot on Sunday.
It was reported that the X-Factor final was watched by 19 million people last weekend, with the eventual winner Joe McElderry taking 60% of the 10 million public votes cast. So with such a massive following how is a Facebook group with 750,000 members giving him and his song 'The Climb' such a challenge for the Christmas Number One?
The major factor which social media and X Factor share is the need of people to be parts of something, to be able contribute. Last weekend people could show the support of X Factor by picking up the phone and voting for their favourite performer. However that was last week, proven further by the fact that by the midweek chart update Joe had only sold 110,000 copies of his winners song, a far cry from the 6 million people votes he received which was in fact 50p more expensive that buying his single on iTunes.
Social media opens up a whole new audience who you can also communicate - in this case 750,000 people on the Facebook group. So now Mr Average in the street can start advertising a topic on social media which can attract people and they can be a part of it.
Furthermore to this, social media like X Factor can attract large media interest to snow ball public interest. So far the Facebook group owner has been on TV, Radio, Newspaper and online. Whilst Joe McElderry has to go down the old press trail of turning up to chat shows to promote his track, social media is helping itself; Twitter is generating tweets from various walks of life across the county, keeping the topic alive. Just Giving website has a charity donation page which has already generated over £40,000 for the Shelter homeless charity (I imagine it is no surprise that the charity which was selected is often closely related with caring at Christmas) is attempting to make it feel like a less commercial activity and now people are creating their own spoof videos on youTube. Everything people are doing is simple to setup, have large audience potential and keep the ball rolling on the subject. Whenever before was this power at your finger tips, without selling your sole to a red top newspaper?