Last Updated 13 years ago by Kenya Engineer
New data from KPMG International shows that women delegates are playing an increasingly prominent role in the public discussion from the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland. While about 17% of WEF delegates in Davos are women, they have accounted for more than a third of Davos delegate social media activity.
Analysis of delegates’ Twitter activity, presented by KPMG website www.weflive.com <http://www.weflive.com> shows that, on day one of the Davos meeting, delegates sent 2,376 tweets, of which 784 were from female attendees (excludes media, who accounted for 1,958 tweets, 45% of total).
KPMG’s research also highlighted the growing involvement of the general public in the online debate with Davos delegates with a 31% increase in retweets, showing greater engagement with the discussions emanating from Davos:
2012 – day one
2013 – day one
Delegates with Twitter accounts
459
810 (580 excl. media)
Tweets
4,436
4,368
Replies
8,021
8,205
Retweets
18,718
27,114
Top trending topics
‘Angela Merkel’, ‘Europe’ and ‘People’ Europe(#eu, #europe, #euspeech), ‘David Cameron’
Isabelle Allen, KPMG’s Global Head of Sales & Markets said, “our analysis shows that Davos is changing and becoming more diverse, and that there is an appetite among the public to take part in these debates. Delegates are paying attention to this social media activity, and I see a great opportunity for a better informed dialogue at the Meeting.”
Women at this year’s annual summit actively using social media to communicate their messages to a wider audience beyond Davos include Christine Lagarde (Managing Director, IMF, Twitter: @Lagarde), Helen Clark (former Prime Minister New Zealand, @HelenClarkUNDP) and Dalia Ziada (award-winning Egyptian women’s rights advocate – @daliaziada).
While the media delegation to Davos averaged three retweets for every tweet they posted (1,936 tweets to 5,629 retweets), ‘Public figures’ averaged 17.5 retweets for every tweet they posted (433 tweets to 7,591 retweets), including Mario Monti (78 retweets, 16 replies), Christine Lagarde (89 retweets, 95 replies) and David Cameron (79 retweets, 47 replies) — demonstrating the power of social media to enable the public and political leaders to engage more directly.






















