By Sunny Sen
20 November 2017
Until Google came calling at Khaula, one of the nearly one lakh villages in Uttar Pradesh, early in 2016, few among the womenfolk there had heard about the internet. A few had seen their men watching videos on smartphones but none had accessed the internet on her own.
Now, more than 1,100 women from Khaula and a few surrounding villages know how to access and regularly access the internet. They teach their children, they teach themselves new skills, they look up fixes to niggling medical problems, and watch YouTube videos.
Khaula is ground zero for an ambitious Google programme, Next Billion initiative, to spread use of the internet in the third world. The initiative rides on the shoulders of women — Internet saathis, who have been roped in to carry the “here’s how to access the internet” message across India. The success or failure of the saathis (saathi means friend in Hindi) in the internet literacy project will make or break the Google programme.
India, whose over 400 million data consumers make it the No. 2 market by internet users behind China, is the top focus country in the Next Billion programme. The project also covers Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, and parts of Africa.
The Internet saathi programme, run by Google along with Tata Trusts, is designed in such a way that two-three women in a village are handpicked and trained to use the internet. They, then, further train thousands of village women – not men – on how to access it. This design is with good reason: less than one-third of Internet users in India are women and the number is far lower in its villages, explained Rajan Anandan, the Google’s VP for SouthEast Asia and India, in a Mint newspaper article last April.
Four years ago, Neetu Bhagour, now 22 years, had made news in the village when won at a state-level wrestling event and was selected for the national level. But, she never made it to the nationals. “My parents didn’t allow me to… girls in our villages are not allowed to play much,” Neetu said, her disappointment showing in her smile.
As we head to her village, about 20 km from Agra in Uttar Pradesh, it is one of the rare occasions when her younger brother has allowed Neetu to sit with a stranger in a car — that, too, a reporter from Delhi. Married women of the village normally pull down a head cloth over their face while meeting men.
Neetu is different and speaks evenly to male strangers. After leaving wrestling, she decided to pursue studies. The college was far away from the village and she didn’t attend every day, yet completed her graduation in science earlier this year — one of the few in Khaula.
It was on one of the days she was home bunking college that her uncle told her that if she had time, she could teach village women how to access the internet. That was about one-and-half years ago
“I had only seen my brother using (the internet). He had an Android phone, but he would never let us use it,” Neetu said. “I decided to learn how to use the internet. People from Google trained us for three-four days… That was the first time I used the internet.”
Google gave her a Lava smartphone and a Celkon tablet – both entry-level brands – to use and train other village women. The cost of the two devices was around Rs 11,000, a price that the Khaula women would perhaps never be able to afford. The trainers also get an umbrella and 2GB of monthly data for each device – all provided by Google. That’s a tab of between Rs 14,000 to Rs 15,000.
It was not easy for Neetu to convince women in her village that learning to access the internet would be useful. Often they would scoff at her: “We don’t need it.” She stayed persistent. “It’s okay if you don’t need the internet, but teach it to your children,” she told them. “Use Google to know anything in this world.”
Neetu is one of the 35,000 Internet saathis in India and Google is backing them. And, in a move atypical of the search giant, it is pouring crores training them: about Rs 50 crore in the gadgets and data connections. “Tata Trusts are equally funding the initiative for us. Google brings in the devices, the data, and the technical know-how of training the Saathis. And Tata Trusts is managing the on-ground implementation, the Saathi stipend…,” said Neha Barjatya, head of ads marketing and digitising India, Google India.
The Saathis are trained on how the web works, especially how to use various Google products like Chrome, Google Search, YouTube, and PlayStore. They are not trained to use any other product, not Facebook or Whatsapp. (See ‘Seven modules, three days’.)
Since the beginning of the Internet saathis project in 2015, Google has covered 105,000 villages in 12 states and taught 11.5 million women how to use the internet — making it the biggest project by Google under its Next Billion initiative and perhaps the single largest such outreach programme anywhere in the world.
Google wants to take the programme to 300,000 villages.
“These women discover the internet (through Google and its products), and eventually discover how to use the internet for their needs,” said Barjatya.
Open the bubbly, not yet
Still, the going is grindingly slow. While Google has been successful to teach women in these villages to use the internet, there is a high-fall out ratio — three of four of those trained stop using the internet after the training.
When the Internet Saathi project started, internet penetration in villages was about 10%, said Barjatya. A recent report by industry lobby IAMAI and market researcher Kantar IMRB shows that it has gone up to 17%.
Barjatya said that Google spent a lot of time understanding the needs of the rural India. These 11.5 million women have at least been introduced to the internet. “Over time we have seen that they have found value in going and buying a smartphone,” Barjatya is optimistic.
The feedback from the saathis, meanwhile, is that the training module needs to change: the time is too short to train someone who had never used the internet, according to them. The Saathis were given a target to train 250 women in a week, based on which they would receive a stipend from Tata Trust. It varies from anything between Rs 4 and Rs 8 for each woman trained.
Barjatya said that they have already changed the targets so that the saathi spends more time with the women. The target, she said, has been brought down to 100 women a month.
While Google has set up a call centre to check how many beneficiaries use the internet after training, there is no way it can ensure that women continue to use it. Call centre agents make random calls to check if the training is sufficient and if they are using the internet. Google might also contemplate returning to the villages to train more women in the same village.
Also, very few women own devices in male-dominated rural Indian society. “We haven’t really got into creating access beyond spreading awareness. However, yes, this is something we are open to and can consider. But right now it is just the literacy part,” Barjatya said, talking about subsidising mobile phones for women in villages.
The data story in India is changing, especially after the launch of Reliance Jio. Google is already in talks with Reliance Jio to provide 4GB of 4G data at Rs 149 a month to the Saathis. Right now it is 2GB of 2G data.
In the next two years, Google will need more devices and more data. For its target of covering 300,000 villages, it will need an army of about 100,000 saathis — nearly a ten-fold jump.
Meanwhile, back at Khaula, Neetu, the former wrestler, has started studying for her entrance test of the Delhi Police Force. YouTube, she said, is coming handy for her studies. She is learning tricks to solve math problems quicker.
Something else happened at Dhanteras, the festival to worship wealth, that made Neetu proud. “I got Rs 4,211 for training the women. I got the money on the day of Dhanteras,” she said. “I gave the money to my father to get the house painted. Without Google, we couldn’t have done that.”
(A version of this story ran in the print edition of Mint newspaper on November 20.)