| Understanding
Viral
You hear the term "viral" in advertising
all the time it seems. People talk about viral
videos, viral web sites, and viral everything.
The thing is, viral is a very specific and incredibly
misused term. To help clear the air, this article talks
about viral for what it specifically means, and ways
to use the "v" word without confusing people.
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| This is a
virus. Note how it doesn't look like a video or
cartoon. |
When You Hear "Viral," Think "Virus"
A virus is a not-complete piece of genetic material
that gets into the cells of animals and replicates itself.
By itself, it's useless. Once it enters a cell, however,
it takes control of that cell, using it to propagate
itself.
When you apply that to advertising, a viral advertising
element is simply something that requires you to do
stuff in order to make it work. In other words, if you
don't do something to help pass the virus along, there
are no laughs, and there's nothing special.
Once again -- if you laugh at an online video and mail
it to ten friends, that's not a virus. You laughed
at it. The video did it's job. If you had to forward
the video to ten friends before you were able to view
the punchline, then it would be a viral video.
But People Say It's Viral If You Forward It
Yes, they do. People also say pregnancy is 9 months,
when it actuality it's more like 10. No matter what
people tell you, if they consider something "viral"
simply because it got popular, they're wrong. According
to their logic, television shows, Pokemon, and naming
your kid "Hunter" would all be viral advertising
elements, which they are not.
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| The chicken
had a viral-like response. Had he flopped, nobody
would have used the "v" word. |
To address advertisements or advertising elements that
grow in popularity quickly, one could say that the element
had a viral-like response. By this, it specifically
means that something was passed in relationships of
one person to many people, and was distributed to many
people in short time. For example, one of those "forward
this to 10 friends and win an X-Box" type emails
is forwarded to ten friends, who forward it to 10 friends,
who forward it on; and by the end of the day, the email
has gone around the world. Of course, the emails never
deliver the prize they promised.
Some experts use the term "viral" to describe
these emails simply because they often contain computer
viruses, but that's a whole different topic.
But Some Say Word Of Mouth Is Viral
No, it's not. Word of mouth is the medium -- it's the
way people spread the message. It doesn't mean that
they'll want to spread the message, or in any way be
compelled or encouraged to do so. If you spend $25k
to have Snoop Dogg tell 10 kids that broccoli is great
and that everybody should eat it, it doesn't mean those
kids are going to spread the message. In fact, kids
are pretty smart, and will figure it's some kind of
ad campaign, and will ignore it.
One sure way to kill a word of mouth campaign is to
tell your audience to tell their friends. People are
smart, and suspicious. If they think you're up to something,
they'll tell you to go away.
Remember, viral is the strategy and the tactic, not
the medium.
You Can Build Viral Campaigns
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| This guy
will tell you he makes viral videos. Remember
him? |
Here's the deal, if you're simply making a Flash cartoon,
online movie, or cute email, you're not building a viral
campaign. Sure, your cartoon may get a viral-like response,
but in no way was it viral. The reason is simple: there
are literally thousands of Flash cartoons and online
videos published on the Internet every single hour!
You cannot tell a client that you will make a viral
online video, because you can't control if people will
like it, or send it out to friends.
Once again, the online video is the medium. Creating
a viral campaign is a strategy, and using viral concepts
are the tactics. Simply making and posting a video is
like buying a lottery ticket.
Making Something Viral
First of all, to make a viral effort, you need to treat
your campaign like you would all campaigns. Make sure
you identify your target audience. Set your goals, budgets,
and all those wonderful things you'd normally do. No
campaign works for everybody.
Next, elements of your advertising effort have to remain
unfinished. In order for someone to get the complete
message, they have to perform some action. You need
to make it very clear to them what will happen once
they complete the action, you need to make it very clear
what that action is, and then you most definitely have
to give them what you promised them once they do. In
the best viral efforts, people can continue to reap
the reward every time they repeat the required action.
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| People won't
pass it along simply because you tell them how. |
Lastly, even without the viral action, the campaign
has to have some kind of substance. Saying, "Send
this to 10 friends and we'll give you something"
isn't enough. Give them something that excites them,
and make them want more and more. Then, when they're
most interested, hit them with the viral element.
An Example Of A Viral Advertising Effort
You client is SNAZ Cola, and you want 7-11 to carry
your product. 7-11 agrees to carry your product if you
can prove that people are interested in your cola.
So you set up a viral campaign, co-branding it with
Cingular. People visit your web site, and enter in the
address of a 7-11 that doesn't carry your product. Players
can "win" prizes in many ways:
- For each store they enter in the database, they
receive a chance to win the Grand Prize, and 5 free
mobile phone minutes. Any store already listed won't
count.
- For each friend they invite to play the contest,
they get 5 free mobile phone minutes. If that friend
has already been invited, or is already a player,
the entry doesn't count.
- For every store owner that signs up, the player
who entered them into the database receives two entries
into the Grand Prize drawing, and 15 free minutes
from Cingular.
- Store owners who complete an order form for SNAZ
Cola receive one case for free, and a $50 gift certificate
from their drink distributor.
As you can see, not everybody would be interested in
playing. Obviously people with non-Cingular mobile service
providers might not be inclined to play. Likewise, if
the prizes aren't interesting to the potential player,
they may decide not to play.
What's important is that you can see how a good campaign
offers many ways for someone to spread the message,
with each action ending in a direct reward.
The Viral Explosion
What's important to learn here is that viral is an active,
incomplete campaign. When done properly, it offers a
huge return on investment, and great publicity.
What's important to note is that the technology communications
explosion (what I like to call the Evernet) is
making it possible for more people to do more things
offline. As the online world grows, the backlash will
be strong, with people craving offline, in-person events
and activities. There is no better advertising element
to use in a campaign to utilize this phenomenon than
viral marketing.
By becoming good at viral marketing (and not viral-like
results) now, you'll be a hot ticket when companies
are clamoring to find people who can take advantage
of the offline explosion that's coming.
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