The World’s Top 50 Influencers Across Social Media Platforms – Visual Capitalist

Ten Classic American Brands Owned by Foreign Companies
Ranked: U.S. Cities with the Highest Rent in 2024
Mapped: Where Tesla and BYD Make Their Cars
Ranked: The Countries Most Dependent on Agricultural Exports
The World’s Largest Economies: Comparing the U.S. and China
What is the Median Pay of Magnificent Seven Companies?
Visualizing the 15 Most Valuable Bitcoin Addresses
Charted: How Many Data Centers do Major Big Tech Companies Have?
Visualizing the Training Costs of AI Models Over Time
Visualizing the Top Countries, by Mobile Data Usage
Mapped: The Income Needed to Live Comfortably in Every U.S. State
Charted: America’s Shift to a Cashless Society
Ranked: U.S. Cities with the Highest Rent in 2024
Mapped: The Income a Family Needs to Live Comfortably in Every U.S. State
Top 10 Countries Most in Debt to the IMF
Which Countries Have Universal Health Coverage?
Visualizing Daily Protein Sources by Region
Mapped: Countries Where Recreational Cannabis is Legal
Which Countries Have the Highest Infant Mortality Rates?
Life Expectancy by Region (1950-2050F)
Comparing Saudi Aramco’s $1.9T Valuation to Its Rivals
Ranked: The World’s Largest Lithium Producers in 2023
Who’s Building the Most Solar Energy?
Mapped: The Age of Energy Projects in Interconnection Queues, by State
Ranked: The Top 10 EV Battery Manufacturers in 2023
Ranked: Countries with the Most Embassies Around the World
Mapped: The Income Needed to Live Comfortably in Every U.S. State
Which Countries Have Universal Health Coverage?
Ranked: The 10 Most Visited Countries in 2023
Mapped: U.S. States by Cost Per Prisoner
Visualizing Raw Steel Production in 2023
Visualizing Cobalt Production by Country in 2023
Ranked: The World’s Largest Lithium Producers in 2023
The Biggest Salt Producing Countries in 2023
Visualizing Copper Production by Country in 2023
Ranked: Top 20 Countries by Plastic Waste per Capita
How People Get Around in America, Europe, and Asia
The Carbon Footprint of Major Travel Methods
Ranking the Top 15 Countries by Carbon Tax Revenue
Ranked: The Countries With the Most Air Pollution in 2023
Published
on
By
>> Download the Report (.pdf)
Biggest Social Media Influencers: Most-followers on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, TikTok

In the modern digital world, social media reach is power.
The people with the most followers on Twitter, for example, have a massive platform to spread their messages, while those with large, engaged followings on Instagram are an advertiser’s dream sponsor partner.
Social media can also be an equalizer of power. It’s true that many celebrities boast large followings across platforms, but social media has also enabled previously unknown personalities to turn YouTube or TikTok fame into veritable star power and influence.
Who has the biggest reach across the entire social media universe? Instead of looking at who has the most followers on Instagram, Twitter, or other networks, we ranked the most-followed personalities across all major platforms combined.
We parsed through hundreds of the most-followed accounts on multiple platforms to narrow down the top influencers across social media as of April 2021.
Sources include trackers of the most followers on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Twitch, and TikTok, verified directly on site and with social media tracker Socialblade.
The results? A top 50 list of social media influencers consisting of athletes, musicians, politicians, and other personalities.
Unsurprisingly, celebrities reign supreme on social media. As of April 2021, soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo was the most-followed person on social media with more than 500 million total followers.
But there are other illuminating highlights, such as the global reach of music. With large and diverse fanbases, artists account for half of the top 50 largest social media followings.
Also notable is the power of Instagram, which was the biggest platform for 67% of the top 50 social media influencers. This includes hard-to-categorize celebrities like the Kardashians and Jenners, which turned reality TV and social media fame into business and media empires.
Download the Generational Power Report (.pdf)
The Generational Power Index
However, it’s not only celebrities that dominate social media.
Personalities that started on one social media platform and developed massive followings include TikTok’s most-followed star Charli D’Amelio and YouTubers Germán Garmendia, Felix “PewDiePie” Kjellberg, and Whindersson Nunes Batista.
Politicians were also prominent influencers. Former U.S. President Barack Obama has the most followers on Twitter, and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has more than 175 million followers across social media.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump would have also made the list with more than 140 million followers across social media before being banned from multiple platforms on January 8, 2021.
While older generations have had to adapt to social media platforms, younger generations have grown up alongside them. As a measure of cultural importance, this gives Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z a rare leg-up on older generations.
Millennials, in particular, hold the lion’s share of spots in this top 50 list:
The average age of the top 50 influencers was just over 37.
In our Generational Power Index (GPI), which measures the share of power generations hold in various categories, digital platforms were a key area where Millennials derived their power and influence. Overall, Baby Boomers—and to a lesser extent, Gen X—still run the show in most areas of society today.
As most fans and advertisers know, not all social media accounts and followings are homogenous.
Many influencers with relatively small followings have more consistent engagement, and are often able to demand high advertising fees as a result.
Conversely, most social media platforms are reckoning with a severe glut of fake accounts or bots that inflate follower counts, impacting everything from celebrities and politicians to personalities and businesses.
Regardless, social media has become a mainstay platform (or soapbox) for today’s cultural influencers. Billions of people turn to social media for news, engagement, recommendations, and entertainment, and new platforms are always on the rise.
Editor’s Note: An earlier version of the data used for this story incorrectly counted Facebook likes instead of followers for some personalities. The content has since been corrected and updated.”
Which U.S. Generation Wields the Most Economic Power?
Which U.S. Generation Wields the Most Cultural Power?
Charted: How Many Data Centers do Major Big Tech Companies Have?
The Highest Earning Athletes in Seven Professional Sports
Charted: Donald Trump’s Net Worth (2014-2024)
Visualized: The Most Followed People on Instagram in 2024
Visualizing the Most Valuable Brands in 12 Countries
Charted: Social Media Usage by U.S. Teenagers
Baby Boomers hold more economic power than Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z together. See how it all breaks down.
Published
on
By
In our inaugural Generational Power Index (GPI) 2021, we’ve ranked generations on how much power and influence they hold in American society.
And when it comes to money and economic power, our research has concluded that Baby Boomers, those between the ages of 57-75, have more influence than Millennials, Gen X, and Gen Z combined.
These findings may seem intuitive, but what exactly contributes to economic power? To find out, let’s take a closer look at the GPI’s underlying variables.
Our starting point was to define the age ranges of each generation:
Using these ranges as a framework, we then calculated our four underlying variables of economic power. Here’s what the distribution within each one looked like:
economic power category breakdown
The earnings variable represents the median weekly earnings of full-time workers in the U.S., and was the most evenly distributed of the four variables. Gen Z had the lowest median weekly earnings ($614), while Gen X had the highest ($1,103).
Boomers established a clear lead in the second variable, net worth, which represents each generation’s share of overall U.S. wealth. As it turns out, Boomers hold 53% of all wealth in the country—more than all other generations combined.
The third variable captures each generation’s share of billionaire wealth, and was dominated by Boomers and the Silent Gen. We calculated this variable by starting with the top 1,000 billionaires globally, then filtering for Americans only.
The final variable, business leaders, is based on two underlying metrics: the generational share of both S&P 500 CEOs and small business owners. This enabled us to capture data from two sides of the business spectrum to see who holds power there.
Download the Generational Power Report (.pdf)
The Generational Power Index
America’s wealth distribution is not stagnant, meaning the balance of economic power shifts with each passing year. Keeping this in mind, here are two of the most compelling trends that we discovered while analyzing data for the GPI report.
The following chart illustrates each generation’s share of household wealth over time.
GPI Share of US household wealth
It makes sense that Baby Boomers would hold the most wealth of any generation. They have had more time to accumulate assets, and the population of Boomers is roughly three times higher than that of the Silent Generation.
What’s more interesting, however, is the stark difference in wealth trajectories between Boomers and younger generations.
While Boomers entered the workforce in a prosperous post-WWII era, Millennials and Gen Z have either started their careers in the aftermath of the 2008 Financial Crisis, or in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
To put it in perspective, when Baby Boomers were as old as today’s Millennials in 1989, they held 21.3% of U.S. wealth. That’s more than four times higher than what Millennials hold now.
America’s small businesses may not have the same scale as global corporations like Apple or Amazon, but they are an incredibly important part of the U.S. economy.
In fact, small businesses make up 99.9% of all U.S. companies, and employ one-third of the nation’s workforce.
Here is who runs small businesses, from a generational perspective:
GPI Share of Small Business Ownership
The 13% share held by Millennials may not sound too impressive, but it is one of the cohort’s strongest areas for economic power.
Looking forward, it seems entrepreneurship will grow into an area of strength for both Millennials and Gen Z, who are 188% more likely to want to create a side business compared to older generations.
Combine this with the fact that e-commerce adoption has been accelerating even faster than expected due to the pandemic, and it’s easy to see how younger, more tech-savvy generations could quickly expand their influence.
Wildfire Area Burned by U.S. State in 2023
Charted: America’s Most Popular Baby Names in 2023
Visualizing the Top Countries, by Mobile Data Usage
Ranked: Top 10 Deadliest Animals for Humans
The World’s Largest Economies: Comparing the U.S. and China
Four Decades of U.S. Wildfires (1983–2024)
Charted: Declining Birth Rates in the Most Populous Countries (1950-Today)
Visualizing the Training Costs of AI Models Over Time
Copyright © 2024 Visual Capitalist

source

Sim

Related Posts

Jimmy Carter 100th birthday concert: list of artists and celebrities who participated – AS USA

Jimmy Carter 100th birthday concert: list of artists and celebrities who participated  AS USAsource

Azealia Banks Might Be the Shins’ Biggest Fan – Vulture

Azealia Banks Might Be the Shins’ Biggest Fan  Vulturesource

Travis Kelce's best friend opens up on welcoming Taylor Swift into their group amid singer's two-week absence – Daily Mail

Travis Kelce’s best friend opens up on welcoming Taylor Swift into their group amid singer’s two-week absence  Daily Mailsource

Walmart Canceled Taylor Swift Clothing Line Worth $150M? – Snopes.com

Walmart Canceled Taylor Swift Clothing Line Worth $150M?  Snopes.comsource

Here are all of the celebrities at the Democratic convention's starry roll call – Yahoo Entertainment

Here are all of the celebrities at the Democratic convention’s starry roll call  Yahoo Entertainmentsource

Photos: Celebrities are everywhere at the Paris Olympics – NewsNation Now

Photos: Celebrities are everywhere at the Paris Olympics  NewsNation Nowsource

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *