State of Online Voting 2026
Annual report on online contest voting trends, platform mechanics, and the evolving marketing landscape.
Published: April 27, 2026 Prepared by: Buyvotescontest.com Research Team
Methodology Disclosure: All figures in this report derive from one or more of the following sources: (1) publicly available platform transparency reports and official blogs from Meta, X (formerly Twitter), Telegram, and Instagram; (2) publicly available Statista industry summaries; and (3) Buyvotescontest.com internal order and customer data spanning 2018–2026. Where platform-specific figures are unavailable or represent our own analytical inference, we label them explicitly as modeled projections. No citations in this report link to nonexistent studies or fabricated external research.
1. Executive Summary
Online contest voting has matured from a niche social-media tactic into a structured marketing discipline practiced across every major digital platform. In 2026, brands, creators, independent artists, and regional businesses run contests on Facebook, Instagram, X, Telegram, YouTube, TikTok, and a growing number of niche community platforms — each with its own voting mechanics, fraud-detection posture, and audience demographic.
This report synthesizes what Buyvotescontest.com has observed across eight years of order data (2018–2026) with publicly available disclosures from Meta, X, Telegram, and Google. The goal is to give contest organizers, marketers, and platform watchers a grounded view of where the industry stands.
Key findings:
- Facebook remains the dominant contest platform by raw order volume, accounting for 42% of all vote purchases processed through Buyvotescontest.com in 2024–2026, though its share is declining as Instagram and Telegram grow.
- Telegram has become the fastest-growing contest channel, with vote-order growth of 61% year-over-year from 2024 to 2025 — a trend driven by Telegram’s channel and group poll features and its expanding user base, which crossed 950 million monthly active users in 2024. [3]
- The average vote-package size is 1,247 votes, reflecting an industry norm of mid-size contest campaigns where the margin between first and second place is typically in the hundreds of votes.
- 58% of orders come from repeat customers, indicating that contest voting assistance has become a repeatable line item in marketing budgets rather than a one-time experiment.
- AI-powered search (Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, ChatGPT) is reshaping how people discover contest voting services, rewarding sites with structured, authoritative content over thin keyword pages.
- Anti-fraud systems on all major platforms tightened meaningfully between 2024 and 2026, particularly on Facebook and Instagram, raising the bar for delivery quality across the vendor landscape.
The sections that follow expand on each of these themes with platform-specific data, geographic breakdowns, industry vertical analysis, pricing benchmarks, and forward-looking observations for 2027.
2. The Online Contest Landscape 2026
2.1 Scale and Ubiquity
Online contests — defined here as any structured public competition in which audience votes determine a winner or ranking — have become one of the most cost-efficient awareness tools available to mid-market brands. Unlike paid advertising, a well-designed contest generates organic sharing, user-generated content, and email list growth as natural byproducts of participation.
Facebook’s global monthly active user base reached 3.27 billion in Q4 2024, according to Meta’s official earnings release. [2] Instagram crossed 2 billion monthly active users in the same period. [1] X (formerly Twitter) has not disclosed comparable MAU figures in recent transparency reports, but the X Developer Platform documents a substantial global polling user base. [6] These three platforms alone represent the vast majority of the global online contest market.
Telegram’s growth has been particularly notable. After crossing 700 million monthly active users in 2022 [4] and 950 million by 2024, [3] the platform’s native poll and quiz features have made it a natural home for community contests — especially in Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, and the MENA region.
2.2 Contest Types
Based on Buyvotescontest.com internal order data, the contest types that most frequently drive voting-assistance demand in 2025–2026 are:
- Photo and video contests — Participants submit creative work; audience votes select winners. Common in photography, fashion, food, and travel niches. These represent the largest share of our order volume (modeled projection: approximately 38%).
- Baby and pet photo contests — A perennially popular sub-category with high emotional engagement and strong social sharing. Roughly 14% of orders (modeled projection).
- Talent and music contests — Online voting for singing, dancing, or performing arts competitions. Strong in emerging markets. Approximately 12% of orders (modeled projection).
- Business and brand contests — Awards programs, “best of” local business polls, and B2B recognition votes. Growing fastest among enterprise clients.
- Sports and esports fan votes — MVP polls, fan-choice awards, and tournament bracket voting.
2.3 Audience Demographics
Contest organizers span a wide demographic range, but Buyvotescontest.com internal data suggests the core customer profile in 2025–2026 is:
- Age: 25–44 (roughly 62% of orders, modeled projection from account registration and communication patterns)
- Role: Small business owner, independent creator, event organizer, or marketing coordinator at an SMB
- Geography: Predominantly English-speaking markets (US, UK, Australia, Canada) plus strong representation from India, the Philippines, and Brazil
- Contest budget: Typically $50–$500 for a complete campaign, of which voting assistance represents 20–40%
2.4 Platform Market Share (Contest Votes Ordered)
Based exclusively on Buyvotescontest.com internal order data for 2024–2026:
| Platform | Share of Vote Orders |
|---|---|
| 42% | |
| 28% | |
| X (Twitter) | 14% |
| Telegram | 9% |
| Other (YouTube, TikTok, niche platforms) | 7% |
Facebook’s dominance reflects its mature poll infrastructure and the large volume of Facebook Groups-based contests. Instagram’s 28% share is notable given that its native voting mechanism is more limited (Stories polls, link-in-bio contest tools), suggesting strong demand for Instagram-specific engagement amplification. Telegram’s 9% — while smaller in absolute terms — represents the fastest-growing segment.
3. Vote Mechanics by Platform
Understanding how each platform implements voting is essential context for understanding both the opportunity and the constraints that contest organizers face.
3.1 Facebook Poll and Reaction Voting
Facebook offers contest organizers several distinct voting mechanisms:
Reaction-based voting remains the most common format. A contestant’s photo or video post is shared in a public group or page, and audience members cast a “Like” or a specific emoji reaction to vote. This approach requires no special tools — just a public post and an agreed-upon reaction type. From a detection standpoint, Meta’s systems monitor for sudden spikes in reactions from accounts with low activity history, geographic implausibility relative to the contest audience, or newly created profiles. [1]
Facebook Polls (available within groups and pages) present a structured multiple-choice format with a built-in vote counter. These are harder to manipulate because Facebook limits one vote per account per poll, and its Graph API surfaces poll vote data to page/group admins. [8] For contests running native Facebook Polls, the competitive dynamic is more transparent but also more scrutinized.
Comment-based voting — where contestants are ranked by comment count — is common in smaller community groups. This is the most permeable format from a volume standpoint.
Meta’s transparency reports describe ongoing investment in “coordinated inauthentic behavior” detection, primarily aimed at political influence operations, but the same signals — account age, posting frequency, IP clustering, behavioral velocity — apply to contest vote patterns. [1]
3.2 Instagram Story Polls and Contest Mechanics
Instagram’s native voting tools are more limited than Facebook’s. The platform offers:
Story Polls — A two-option or slider poll embedded in a Story, lasting 24 hours. These are ephemeral by design, making them suitable for quick “round of the day” voting but impractical for multi-week contests.
Comment-count contests — The most durable Instagram contest format, where contestants drive comment volume on a specific post. Instagram’s algorithm surfaces high-comment posts organically, creating a compounding engagement effect.
Link-in-bio third-party tools — Many Instagram contests now route voting through external platforms (Woobox, Gleam, ShortStack) that embed on a brand’s website and track votes independently of Instagram’s native systems. This pattern is growing, as it gives organizers more control and better analytics.
Instagram creators’ official guidance via @creators emphasizes “authentic engagement” and discourages coordinated inauthentic activity, consistent with Meta’s broader policy posture. [5]
3.3 X (Twitter) Polls
X’s native poll feature allows any account to create a poll with 2–4 options, a maximum duration of 7 days, and one vote per logged-in account. The X Developer Platform API provides programmatic access to poll creation and results for developers. [6]
Key mechanical facts for contest organizers:
- Anonymous by design: Poll voters are not publicly visible, only the aggregate count. This reduces social proof for contestants but also limits platform-side behavioral analysis per voter.
- 7-day maximum duration means longer contests require multiple poll cycles, which is atypical for annual award-style voting.
- Account verification (blue checkmark) does not gate poll voting — any logged-in account can vote, verified or not.
- X’s Transparency Center and developer blog document ongoing work on spam and manipulation detection, though X has scaled back some of its trust-and-safety disclosures relative to the pre-2022 period. [7]
3.4 Telegram Polls
Telegram’s poll feature, embedded natively in channels and groups, has become one of the most contest-friendly voting mechanisms available:
- Quiz mode vs. regular poll: Regular polls allow multiple votes (configurable) or single-choice; quiz mode reveals the correct answer after voting. Contest organizers use regular polls.
- Anonymous vs. non-anonymous: Telegram allows poll creators to make votes non-anonymous, showing which accounts voted for which option. This creates social accountability but also makes vote patterns more transparent.
- No hard duration limit: Telegram polls can remain open indefinitely, unlike X’s 7-day cap, making them practical for extended contests.
- Group size scale: Telegram groups support up to 200,000 members. Public channels have no member cap. This means a single Telegram poll can reach an enormous audience organically.
Telegram’s official blog has documented infrastructure improvements supporting poll scalability, particularly relevant after its user base growth acceleration. [3][4] The platform does not publish a detailed anti-spam transparency report comparable to Meta’s, but its terms of service prohibit artificial vote inflation.
3.5 Emerging Platforms
TikTok has not yet developed a robust native voting feature for contests, but its comment-count and duet-based competition formats are growing. YouTube’s Community Poll feature is used for fan-vote contests in the creator economy. Neither platform currently represents a major segment of Buyvotescontest.com order volume, but both are monitored as growth opportunities.
4. Anti-Fraud Landscape 2026
4.1 What Changed Since 2024
The period from 2024 to 2026 saw meaningful tightening of anti-manipulation systems across all major platforms, driven by three concurrent pressures: (1) increased regulatory scrutiny of coordinated inauthentic behavior in the context of elections and public discourse, (2) AI-powered anomaly detection becoming cheaper and more deployable at scale, and (3) platform advertiser pressure for “authentic” engagement metrics.
Meta (Facebook + Instagram): Meta’s transparency reports published in 2024 and 2025 describe expanded use of machine learning classifiers that detect behavioral velocity anomalies — specifically, the rate at which reactions, comments, or poll votes accumulate on a given post relative to the account’s historical engagement baseline. [1] The systems flag accounts whose voting behavior is inconsistent with their organic activity pattern. Meta has also increased scrutiny of accounts created within 30 days of a vote-casting event.
X: X’s developer blog documents API-level rate limiting that affects automated interactions. [7] The platform’s evolving subscription model (X Premium) has introduced paid verification as a signal of account authenticity, though it does not gate voting behavior directly.
Telegram: Telegram’s anti-spam infrastructure is less publicly documented than Meta’s, but the platform has increased enforcement against bot-operated accounts in response to user complaints about poll manipulation in community groups. The Telegram official blog has acknowledged work on automated spam detection without disclosing specific technical parameters. [3]
4.2 What Detection Systems Actually Look For
Based on publicly available platform documentation and our operational observations across thousands of deliveries, anti-fraud systems on major social platforms in 2026 typically evaluate:
- Account age and activity history: Accounts with no prior posting, liking, or commenting activity are weighted less and flagged more.
- Geographic coherence: A cluster of votes originating from IP ranges inconsistent with the contest’s stated audience geography raises flags.
- Velocity patterns: A sudden spike of 500 votes in 10 minutes is more suspicious than 500 votes distributed over 48 hours.
- Device fingerprinting: Multiple votes from the same device or browser fingerprint, regardless of account identity.
- Behavioral consistency: Does the account interact with other content on the platform in the ways a real user would?
4.3 Industry Quality Differentiation
These tightening standards have materially differentiated vendors in the contest-vote assistance industry. Low-quality providers using bot farms with thin accounts face increasing delivery failure rates and refund demands. Providers like Buyvotescontest.com that prioritize account quality, delivery pacing, and geographic coherence have seen our competitive position strengthen as platform standards rise. Delivery quality, not price alone, has become the primary competitive axis.
4.4 What Contest Organizers Should Know
Contest organizers — whether purchasing assistance or simply running organic campaigns — should understand that platform detection systems are not primarily designed to catch contest vote assistance specifically. They are general-purpose engagement authenticity systems. The practical implication is that quality signal (account realism, behavioral coherence, pacing) matters far more than volume alone.
5. Geographic Patterns
5.1 Top 10 Countries Running Contests
Based on Buyvotescontest.com internal order data (2024–2026), the top 10 countries by order volume are:
| Rank | Country | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | United States | Largest single market; e-commerce, talent, baby/pet contests dominate |
| 2 | United Kingdom | Strong brand-award and local business contest culture |
| 3 | India | Fastest growing market; talent contests and regional business awards |
| 4 | Canada | Similar contest typology to US; bilingual market adds French-language contests |
| 5 | Australia | Strong photography and small business contest activity |
| 6 | Philippines | High social media penetration; talent and entertainment contests prominent |
| 7 | Germany | B2B awards and “best of” regional business contests |
| 8 | Brazil | Growing e-commerce contest market; Instagram-heavy |
| 9 | Nigeria | Music and talent contest category; Telegram growing fast |
| 10 | Ukraine / Eastern Europe (aggregate) | Strong Telegram contest culture; civic and community contests |
These rankings reflect Buyvotescontest.com’s customer base and should not be interpreted as a complete picture of the global online contest market, which includes large non-English-language segments not fully represented in our order data.
5.2 Regional Platform Preferences
Platform preferences vary significantly by region:
North America and Western Europe: Facebook and Instagram dominate. X has a significant but smaller presence, particularly for media and entertainment industry contests.
South and Southeast Asia (India, Philippines, Indonesia): Facebook remains dominant for community contests. Telegram is growing rapidly, particularly for music and talent competitions. Instagram is strong among urban demographics.
Eastern Europe (Ukraine, Russia-adjacent markets, Poland): Telegram is disproportionately represented relative to global averages — likely reflecting both the platform’s high regional penetration and the cultural norm of community-organized group contests.
Latin America (Brazil, Mexico, Colombia): Instagram is stronger relative to global averages, reflecting the platform’s high engagement rates in these markets. Publicly available Statista data on regional social media usage supports this observation. [12]
Sub-Saharan Africa (Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya): Telegram and Facebook split the market. Mobile-first usage patterns favor platforms with efficient data consumption.
5.3 Contest Seasonality
Internal order data shows clear seasonal patterns (modeled projection based on 2022–2026 order timing):
- Q4 (October–December): Highest contest activity globally, driven by holiday gifting campaigns, year-end awards, and brand engagement pushes.
- Q1 (January–February): Second highest, as brands launch new-year campaigns.
- Q2–Q3: Lower baseline activity, with spikes around local holidays, back-to-school periods, and summer lifestyle campaigns.
6. Industries Running Contests
6.1 E-Commerce and Retail (34% of Orders)
E-commerce brands represent the largest single industry vertical in Buyvotescontest.com’s customer base. Contest formats commonly used include:
- Product launch photo contests: Customers submit photos using a new product; votes determine featured users and prizes.
- Brand ambassador competitions: Applicants compete for an influencer or ambassador role; public voting creates earned media.
- Seasonal giveaway votes: “Vote for your favorite product” campaigns drive engagement and email capture simultaneously.
The ROI case for e-commerce contest voting assistance is straightforward: a contest that drives 10,000 impressions and 500 email signups at a total cost of $150–$300 (including voting assistance) compares favorably to equivalent paid acquisition costs on Meta or Google Ads.
6.2 Music and Entertainment (18% of Orders)
Independent musicians, labels, and talent competition organizers represent the second-largest vertical. Key patterns:
- Unsigned artist competitions with online voting components are run by radio stations, music blogs, and emerging streaming platforms.
- Music video view and vote competitions on platforms like YouTube and Instagram increasingly supplement Facebook-based contests.
- Regional talent shows moving online — a trend accelerated by the 2020–2022 pandemic period and now established as a permanent format in many markets.
6.3 Photography and Creative Arts (16% of Orders)
Photography contests with public voting represent a mature, well-organized segment. Brands like camera manufacturers, travel companies, and lifestyle publications run annual or quarterly photo contests. The typical contest structure: submit via a dedicated platform or social tag, vote via Facebook or Instagram, prize awarded publicly.
6.4 B2B and Business Awards (14% of Orders)
“Best of” regional business awards, industry recognition programs, and professional association votes are a growing segment. These contests tend to run on websites (often Woobox or custom-built) with Facebook or email-based voting. They are characterized by:
- Longer contest durations (30–90 days)
- Higher stakes per vote (small number of competing businesses, large reputational value per vote)
- More sophisticated fraud-detection awareness among organizers
6.5 Baby, Pet, and Family Contests (11% of Orders)
Emotionally driven, high-sharing contests. Parents and pet owners enter photos; family and friend networks mobilize for votes. These contests generate exceptional organic reach but also intense competition, which drives demand for voting assistance.
6.6 Other Verticals (7%)
Sports fan votes, political campaign (non-electoral) awareness contests, nonprofit fundraising votes, and educational institution competitions make up the remaining share.
7. Pricing Benchmarks
7.1 Industry Cost-Per-Vote Landscape
Pricing for contest vote assistance varies widely across the industry, reflecting significant differences in delivery quality, account authenticity, and platform risk. Based on Buyvotescontest.com’s market observations and competitive analysis:
| Platform | Low-Quality Range (CPV) | Mid-Quality Range (CPV) | High-Quality Range (CPV) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0.01–$0.02 | $0.04–$0.06 | $0.07–$0.12 | |
| $0.02–$0.03 | $0.05–$0.08 | $0.09–$0.15 | |
| X (Twitter) | $0.02–$0.04 | $0.06–$0.09 | $0.10–$0.18 |
| Telegram | $0.01–$0.02 | $0.03–$0.05 | $0.06–$0.10 |
These are market observations based on Buyvotescontest.com pricing analysis and competitive landscape review. They are not derived from an independent industry survey.
7.2 Why Quality Tiers Exist
The cost difference between low-quality and high-quality vote delivery reflects operational inputs: account quality and age, delivery pacing infrastructure, geographic targeting capability, and risk management (replacements or refunds for undelivered votes). As platform anti-fraud systems have tightened (see Section 4), the quality premium has grown. Low-quality delivery increasingly fails to complete, making the effective CPV — accounting for incomplete orders — higher than the nominal rate.
7.3 Buyvotescontest.com Positioning
Buyvotescontest.com occupies the mid-to-high quality tier. Our pricing reflects the operational cost of maintaining delivery quality that survives platform scrutiny — gradual pacing, account behavioral coherence, geographic relevance where applicable. Our repeat customer rate of 58% (internal data) is the clearest indicator that delivery quality justifies the price premium over bottom-tier competitors.
We offer volume pricing for orders exceeding 5,000 votes and a satisfaction guarantee with replacement votes for any under-delivery. These policies are reflected in our customer retention metrics.
7.4 Total Addressable Market (Modeled Projection)
We estimate the global market for contest vote assistance services at $30–$60 million annually (modeled projection, based on extrapolating from our own order volume, public visibility of competitor operators, and platform-level contest activity estimates). This is a small but structurally growing market, driven by the expansion of online contests as a marketing channel and the increasing competitiveness of those contests.
8. AI Search Era Impact
8.1 How AI Overviews and SGE Changed Contest Discovery
Google’s Search Generative Experience (SGE), now integrated into standard search results as AI Overviews, fundamentally changed how people discover services like contest vote assistance beginning in 2023–2024. The impact has been uneven — beneficial for sites with authoritative structured content, damaging for thin keyword pages that previously ranked on backlink volume alone.
Google Search Central’s documentation on AI Overviews emphasizes that the feature draws on content that demonstrates “experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness” (E-E-A-T). [10] For a niche service category like contest voting, this means:
- Long-form explanatory content (like this report) is more likely to be cited in AI Overviews than product landing pages.
- Transparent methodology disclosure signals the kind of factual reliability AI systems are designed to surface.
- Structured data (schema markup) helps AI systems correctly categorize and excerpt content.
8.2 Perplexity and ChatGPT Search
Perplexity AI and ChatGPT’s web-search capabilities have added new discovery vectors that did not exist at meaningful scale two years ago. Users now ask conversational questions like “how do I get more votes in a Facebook contest?” and receive synthesized answers that cite specific websites.
Buyvotescontest.com’s internal observation (modeled projection) is that AI-referred traffic now represents approximately 8–12% of new visitor sessions — a share that has grown from near-zero in 2023. These visitors convert at a higher rate than average, likely because they arrive with more specific intent and a higher baseline of contextual understanding.
8.3 What This Means for Content Strategy
The AI search era rewards content that is:
- Factually grounded — with disclosed sources and explicit methodology, as AI systems are increasingly good at detecting unsourced claims.
- Structurally navigable — well-organized with clear headings, enabling AI systems to excerpt specific sections accurately.
- Genuinely informative — answering real user questions rather than optimizing for keyword density.
- Regularly updated — AI search systems favor freshness signals for time-sensitive topics.
This annual report is itself a strategic content asset designed for AI discoverability, as much as for human readership. Our approach — disclosing methodology, citing public sources, acknowledging the limits of our data — is aligned with the direction all major AI search systems are moving.
8.4 TikTok Search and Social Discovery
TikTok’s in-app search has become a significant discovery channel for marketing services among the 18–34 demographic. Short-form explanatory videos about contest strategy and vote mechanics rank well in TikTok search without requiring an advertising budget. Buyvotescontest.com is expanding its presence on this channel in 2026.
9. Predictions for 2027
The following observations are forward-looking and based on trend extrapolation from current data. They are modeled projections, not guaranteed outcomes.
9.1 Telegram Overtakes X in Contest Vote Volume
If current growth rates continue, Telegram will surpass X (Twitter) as the third-largest platform by contest-vote order volume on Buyvotescontest.com by Q3 2027. Telegram’s expanding user base, permissive API, and long-running poll capability make it structurally well-suited for contest use. X’s ongoing monetization experiments and API restriction policies create headwinds.
9.2 AI-Native Contest Platforms Will Emerge
We anticipate the launch of one or more dedicated AI-native contest platforms by 2027 — tools that use generative AI to auto-create contest rules, scoring rubrics, and promotional content, while offering built-in voting infrastructure. These platforms would represent a new category of potential partner or distribution channel for vote-amplification services.
9.3 Tighter Platform Identity Verification
Meta has publicly signaled continued investment in real-identity verification for high-risk engagement actions. We expect at least one major platform to introduce optional or mandatory identity confirmation before voting in public contests by 2027. This will further elevate the quality premium in the vendor market and reduce the viability of low-quality bot-based providers.
9.4 B2B Awards Segment Will Be the Fastest-Growing Category
The B2B awards and industry recognition contest segment, currently 14% of our order volume, will likely become the fastest-growing category by 2027. As more professional associations and B2B media properties move their recognition programs online, and as the competitive stakes for winning industry awards grow (SEO backlink value, sales enablement use cases), demand for voting assistance in this segment will grow disproportionately.
9.5 Cross-Platform Contest Campaigns Become Standard
Today, 31% of our customers with multi-order histories have ordered votes across two or more platforms (modeled projection). By 2027, cross-platform contest design — running simultaneous polls on Facebook, Telegram, and an owned website — will likely be the default approach for sophisticated organizers, and platforms integrating easily with third-party contest tools will gain share.
10. Methodology and Sources
10.1 Data Sources Used in This Report
This report draws on three categories of source:
Category A — Public Platform Disclosures: Meta’s Transparency Center publishes quarterly transparency reports and earnings releases with user count data. [1][2] Instagram’s official @creators channel and about.instagram.com publish creator policy and feature updates. [5] The X Developer Platform and Twitter Developer Blog document API capabilities and policy changes. [6][7] The Facebook Graph API documentation describes poll and reaction mechanics. [8] Telegram’s official blog (telegram.org/blog) documents feature releases and milestone announcements. [3][4]
Category B — Publicly Available Industry Statistics: Statista’s publicly available summaries of social media user counts and regional digital behavior were used for directional context on platform scale and regional usage patterns. [12] No paywalled Statista reports were used; only publicly accessible summary pages.
Category C — Buyvotescontest.com Internal Order Data: Order volume figures, platform share percentages, customer repeat-purchase rates, industry vertical breakdowns, geographic distributions, and average package sizes derive from Buyvotescontest.com’s internal order records spanning 2018–2026. This data reflects our customer base and should not be assumed to represent the full global market. Where we extrapolate from our data to broader market observations, we label those observations explicitly as modeled projections.
10.2 What We Did Not Do
- We did not fabricate citations to academic papers, industry reports, or news articles that do not exist.
- We did not attribute quotes or statistics to named individuals or organizations without a verifiable public source.
- We did not use AI-generated “placeholder” citations.
10.3 Limitations
Our internal data is biased toward English-speaking markets, toward customers who found us through search, and toward contest types that are common in Western digital marketing culture. Large contest markets in China (WeChat, Weibo), Japan, and South Korea are not represented in our data. The figures in this report should be read as indicative of the markets we serve, not as a complete global census.
10.4 Numbered Sources
- Meta Transparency Center — https://transparency.meta.com/reports/
- Meta Q4 2024 Earnings Release — https://investor.fb.com/investor-news/press-release-details/2025/Meta-Reports-Fourth-Quarter-and-Full-Year-2024-Results/default.aspx
- Telegram Official Blog — https://telegram.org/blog
- Telegram 700 Million Users Blog Post — https://telegram.org/blog/700-million
- Instagram Official Announcements — https://about.instagram.com/blog/announcements
- X Developer Platform Documentation — https://developer.x.com/en/docs/twitter-api
- Twitter Developer Blog — https://blog.twitter.com/developer/en_us
- Facebook Graph API Documentation — https://developers.facebook.com/docs/graph-api/
- Google Search Central Blog — https://developers.google.com/search/blog
- Google Search Central — E-E-A-T Guidelines — https://developers.google.com/search/blog
- Buyvotescontest.com Internal Order Data (2018–2026) — proprietary
- Statista — Social Media Statistics (publicly available summaries) — https://www.statista.com/statistics/264810/number-of-monthly-active-facebook-users-worldwide/
Report prepared by Buyvotescontest.com, April 2026. Reproduction with attribution permitted. For questions about methodology or data, contact the Buyvotescontest.com editorial team.