Influx Insights Tag Feed: viralmarketing
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2008-11-20T14:43:49Zthe art of the tease
http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/article/1471/the-art-of-the-tease.html
Spotted in a bar in <span style="font-weight: bold;">Belize. </span><br><br>The intrigue of <span style="font-weight: bold;">that poker game. </span><br><br>To get people to talk, they've got to know something about it. They've got to be made <br>curious. You've got to get them asking questions.<br><br>It's that (secret) in this "ad" that does all the hard work here.<br><br><img src="%3C%20a%20href=" http://www.flickr.com/photos/edcotton/756968555="" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1104/756968555_dc1e1c55d1.jpg" alt="Secret Game" height="333" width="500"><br><br>Posted by Ed CottonInflux Insights2007-07-15T15:42:16Zwhat's wrong with viral marketing?
http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/article/1355/what-s-wrong-with-viral-marketing-.html
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0393041425/102-7519103-7759328?vi=glance">Duncan Watts</a>, Professor of Sociology at Columbia University, was recently interviewed on the topic of viral marketing for<a target="_blank" href="http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu/b01/en/hbr/hbr_ideacast.jhtml"> HBR’s Ideacast </a>series.<br><br>Watts started out by explaining how viruses work, highlighting how it’s well known to science that a small number of people start epidemics. For a virus to become an epidemic, it requires each infected person infects at least one other person. Infect less than one and a viral epidemic doesn’t occur. <br><br>In science terms, an epidemic requires a <b>“reproduction rate” of 1.</b> <br><br>Watts believes marketers need think beyond viral, to an alternative that he calls <b>Big Seed Marketing</b>. This demands marketers go beyond the analogy of viral, where current thinking demands that viruses start with a small number of people. His recommendation is not to replace traditional marketing with viral, but introduce viral elements to traditional programs. <br><br>Simply put, pay for an initial base and then add tools to help spread the idea. <br><br>Watts used <b>Procter and Gamble’s </b>launch of <b>Tide Cold Water</b>, as an example of Big Seed Marketing in action. P&G wanted a true viral effect, but in tests campaigns generated “reproduction rates” that were significantly less than 1. <br><br>Procter then sent the campaign to its mailing list of 900,000 people and discovered that it took <b>20 people to infect 1</b>. Although the impact wasn’t as viral as they had hoped for, they still added 40,000 people for no cost. Importantly, they didn’t start out small hoping to seed the idea; they started with almost 1 million people. <br><br>For years we’ve been using the “viral” in viral marketing, thinking and hoping that it’s marketing that works like a virus, it turns out we were wrong on two fronts; there’s no such thing as a truly viral marketing campaign and if you want to get the next best thing, forget small, you need to start out big.<br><br>Influx Insights2007-05-13T23:26:54Zmeme spreading at a baseball game
http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/article/1336/meme-spreading-at-a-baseball-game.html
Everyone these days is talking about viral marketing and memes, but it's often a tough concept to grasp, it appears so intangible. <br><br>So here's a great real world example for you. <br><br><a target="_blank" href="http://www.improveverywhere.com/"><b>Improv Everywhere</b></a> are a NYC performance group who are all about doing great stunts (100s of blue shirts invade Best Buys, when U2 comes to NYC they staged their own rooftop concert with a U2 look-a-like and sound-a-like band, etc). <br><br>Its latest exploit was to "Punk'd" Yankee Stadium in the middle of a baseball game. <br><br>One of its "agents" spent several innings pretending to be unable and incapable of finding his seat. It started when he tried to return to his seat after visiting a concession stand and despite the shouts of "Rob" from his friends, he couldn't find it.<br><br>The Rob virus quickly spread throughout the stadium with hillarious results. <br><br>A full account can be found <a target="_blank" href="http://www.improveverywhere.com/2006/08/30/rob%21/">here. </a><br><br>It really shows how interesting ideas can spread quickly. <br><br>Apparently, all it takes is one dumb guy at a baseball game. <br><br>Here are six reasons why it works.<br><br>1. The crowd is connected- in a physically confined space and they are all Yankee fans- which allows the idea to spread quickly<br>2. There is lots of attention on the crowd because of the numerous breaks in the game-people are often looking around the crowd as well as the field-so they are looking for something to catch their attention that might have talk value for the person they are watching the game with<br>3. Someone lights the fuse- friends start the story- they set up the character and the problem for the rest of the crowd<br>4. It becomes a storyline. Rob has become a character with a dilemma<br>5. It's interactive- it's become a game-help Rob find his seat- people naturally want to help<br>6. There's also mystery.Why is he doing this?- the expected reasons are because he is stupid and/or drunk- which are amusing topics for baseball fans<br><br>Via <a target="_blank" href="http://crystaltips.typepad.com/wonderland/">Wonderland</a>Influx Insights2007-05-05T10:34:05Z