Viral Marketing - Another Set of New Clothes for the Emperor?
fingal asks: "I've recently started working for a company who has decided that viral marketing is The Way Forwards. I've got mixed feelings about this. As the sysadmin who has to deal with the aftermath of hosting our own stuff and dealing with the inevitable congestion associated with the (rapidly increasing) size of attachments that are routinely moved about, it just winds me up. On the other hand - I very much enjoy checking out what people are up to (except when they email it to me and I'm on a dial-up...), but I don't think that I've ever actually bought anything as a result. What does everyone think about about this (either from the viewpoint of a consumer, provider or infrastructure engineer)?" Here is a better definition of the term "viral marketing". What are your thoughts on this subject?
Here is a better definition of the term "viral marketing". What are your thoughts on this subject?
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Er, you just pointed to the everything2.com homepage. And while that is an example of HOW viral marketing is carried out, I think your primary intent was to point to the everything2 definition, which is here:
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=60563
It has nothing to do with big email attachments or recipe sites.
In short, it's the practice of having people post "reviews" or "opinions" into usenet/forums/irc, that are actually paid adverts by the company.
From that page: This isn't like traditional spam, as it's not repetitive or obvious. Some attempts are made to make the posts appear 'genuine'.
Cheers,
Your Friendly Karma Whore.
"I've recently started working for a company who has decided that viral marketing is The Way Forwards. I've got mixed feelings about this...
You *may* have just started, but after posting material criticizing your company to Slashdot, I'm dubious that you're going to keep your employment long...
May we never see th
Viral marketing is deceptive. It may be effective, but hell, so is just lying.
I mean, you pay people to astroturf your product. To state their "opinion" about it without adding on "Oh, and I work for XYZ corporation," or, "XYZ corporation paid me $10 to post this." Why do they not say these things? Because they know that if they did, no one would take their opinion seriously. Well, if no one would take you seriously, perhaps your message is lacking.
Which seems to usually be the case. Companies that already get good word of mouth don't need to astroturf.
Huh? You need to clarify the definition.
In my mind, "Viral Marketing" is similar to "word-of-mouth" marketing. It's one of the oldest marketing schemes around.
You promote products to your customers, and then your customers promote the product to their friends via email ("Hey Barbara, I get this newsletter from xxx.com, and I think you'll find it useful), over coffee ("Oh, I found this great new website...", whatever.
It has very little to do with large email attachments. It's all about focusing on a small, tight-knit community who communicates alot, and then exploiting those communication channels. Word of mouth.
My former employeer (A large new-parent oriented website with millions of unique visitors a month) was the queen of viral marketting. They probably had the best word-of-mouth promotion of any site on the planet. Why? Because new parents communicate alot. They NEED information, and want to help out the other new parents as much as possible, and end up promoting the website just like they say "Have you checked out Penelope Leach's new baby book?". Big bang for the marketing buck.
So, in this case, viral marketing was working pretty good, but not good enough, because some of us got laid off a few months ago.
"Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
Yeah, I know about "viral marketing" - it's like when you get a post onto the homepage of Slashdot, advertising^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H containing interesting links to various other sites (isn't Everything2 affiliated with OSDN...?), thus generating positive discussions and a sort of underground 'buzz' about something...
Only you forgot to tell us what the product is - but I've figured it out! It's gotta be MY VIRAL MARKETING COMPANY, which I've just started and which is poised to take over the world within hours! Tell your friends, they'll like you even better.
I need to go back to bed now.
Perfectly Normal Industries
...is, in my opinion, copyleft -- especialy the GNU General Public License, a great Richard Stallman's contribution to open source software. Other than that, I don't really think anything will work.
> GNU General Public License, a great Richard
> Stallman's contribution to open source software
Please! Richard Stallman has NOTHING to do with open source movement! This was a great contribution to FREE SOFTWARE movement, a movement started in 1983 by Richard Stallman, which was later bastardized by Eric Raymond, after ripping off the Debian Free Software Guidlines and publishing them as "Open source definition" in 1998! Why the fuck no one is paying attention to this issues?! You just sicken me with your endless ignorance!
No, www.everything2.com/index.pl is not a better definition of viral marketing, since there's nothing on that page that even mentions the phrase. (Was it supposed to be a better example of viral marketing? I'm guessing, since I still don't know what the fuck viral marketing is, but that site didn't define a thing.
The page linked to by the submitter talks about viewing the latest "viral films" and discussing them, but still doesn't tell me what it is we're all talking about.
You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
I don't mind someone doing a post and if their own work/business is relevant to the discussion, swell, add in a link to the product or service, but to do it sneakily is just... wrong.
I'm assuming this entire incoherent article is just an attempt at a viral advertisement for your website.
Did you get paid to submit it to Slashdot every day until some editor came back from lunch stoned and accepted it, or did your company's marketing department just give up and slip Cliff $100 worth of ditch weed and tijuana hookers to post this trite?
Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
This entire story is an obvious spam. At least four of his five links (including the userid link) are self promotional, linked to sites that are part of the same little obscure lets-all-list-each-other-as-clients family circle. The fifth link I haven't clicked on because the domain name looks like something that could lead to iffy content from the standpoint of my company's internet surfing rules.
"We provide bespoke solutions" --- Huh?
is still Spam
Just as Multi-Level Marketers try to hide behind other names (Network Marketing, etc), viral marketing is just another name for Spam.
Finally a post which actually addresses the points that I was actually hoping to have a discussion about...
This is the key. By definition, once a viral campaign gets going, you have no control at all over who looks at your gimmick or even how many people look at it. If folk are emailing it to each other then this is not your concern because there is no direct cost to yourself or the client. However, if the cost of participating in the gimmick is carried by yourself (because you are hosting the data), then hundred's of thousands of unsuitable eyes looking at your ad suddenly becomes a problem.
Most advertising mediums have a modicum of targetting. You decide roughly speaking where and how you are going to release the advertisments in the hope of targetting a specific audience which is hopefully relevant to the product. However, once a viral campaign is under way then you have no control at all. You have no idea what sort of people are going to participating or whether it is sucessful...
So what I am interested in is if there is any research done on the demographic spread of viral style ads as defined by the previous poster and whether or not they have been effective in terms of a return on the investment. (Maybe it's time to try and hack webalizer into one of the graphical traceroute functions to try and plot the spread of a site...)
The only Good System is a Sound System
Score:2 -- WTF?! Are all the moderators on crack today?! Please mod this fuckin troll down, thank you.
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