By: John Caldecott
Viral Marketing – Why is it so Powerful?
By John Caldecott.
Viral marketing is the new marketing and advertising trend right now, especially in the online scene. It takes advantage of the internet’s network effect to be able to reach a great number of people in such a short time.
Benefits of Viral Marketing
Viral marketing strategies offer several advantages to businesses.
- Easy to execute. There are several methods of sending viral contents or messages and all of them are easy to do. Among those methods are sending email, instant messaging, and using web sites. Sending viral messages through these media will not take much effort and time.
- Low-cost. As compared to sending direct mails, viral marketing proves to be cheaper and a more cost-effective method. With just a little investment on viral advertising, its power can reach even hundreds of thousands of people as compared to spending the same amount of money to traditional advertising methods. That is because the only money to spend is for sending the initial set of viral contents, then forwarding or replicating the message will not require additional costs anymore.
- Good targeting. With viral marketing, there is a huge probability that the message will reach people that are interested in it. Since the concept of viral marketing is essentially passing on a message from a user to another person, most likely, the user will pass it to a person whom he knows will be interested in it. Thus, the percentage of wasted advertising, which is sending the message to the wrong market, will be reduced.
- High and rapid response rate. Since viral marketing reaches a good number of the business’ target market, there is also a big possibility to have a high turnover ratio. Even if the responses will not immediately convert into profits, there will still be huge traffic that the business will receive which is what most web owners want.
These are indeed great benefits a business can get by adopting this marketing technique. But what really makes it more powerful than other marketing or advertising strategies?
Let us take the example of Hotmail, where this viral marketing term really started. Hotmail was able to spread over the internet at an amazing rate. It is like an epidemic that quickly spreads out to others once there is a single person infected by the virus. That is why this technique was named as such.
According to Hotmail’s statistics, its number of subscribers grew from zero to twelve million users in just 18 months. Imagine that! What’s more amazing is that the company spent just $50,000 on advertising to achieve that number of subscribers. Compare that to Juno which spent $20 million on traditional advertising during the same time period as Hotmail but got much less output.
With those facts about Hotmail, viral marketing’s main strength is indeed reaching a huge number of the target market at a considerably low cost. Hotmail did not even have marketing or advertising presence in most countries outside the United States but it got to be the major email service provider in these places like India and Sweden.
What adds more power to viral marketing is the fact that the viral message passed on is like an endorsement from a friend or somebody who can be trusted. People have this way of thinking that “if my friend uses this product and is happy about it, what stops me from using it as well?”
In Hotmail’s case, when those people who received an email from their friends, relatives, or colleagues using Hotmail learned that it works and their friend is a user, they quickly signed up and became members as well. These people wanted to belong in this group where their friends are also in. This technique is also a matter of association or affiliation.
Hotmail’s case is not an isolated one, though. During the same time that Hotmail is gaining its popularity, so does ICQ. ICQ is like a buddy list and instant messenger, much like MSN and Yahoo Messenger now. ICQ also used the same technique and marketing campaign and it gained almost the same number of subscribers as Hotmail within the same time frame.
Viral marketing is indeed one powerful tool to increase popularity of a product or service. However, just like any other things, proper use of the technique is necessary. A single mistake of misuse of it may mean permanent damage to the product or service being promoted.
Godbless, John Caldecott.
http://www.freesoftwareandebooks.com
http://www.softwarenebooks.info
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By: John Caldecott
What Is Viral Marketing?
By John Caldecott.
When you purchased an item or availed of a service of a certain establishment and are satisfied with what you got, don’t you recommend that to a friend?
And when you give your recommendation, doesn’t your friend buy or avail of it as well? That is Viral Marketing!
More often than not, we express our satisfaction with some product or service by telling our friends and relatives about our experience.
Some of them will actually try the same product or service that we recommended.
Essentially, we have just successfully advertised the product through word-of-mouth without the establishment having to spend a penny on it.
That is the idea behind viral marketing. Viral marketing is an advertising strategy that entices people to pass on a marketing message to their relatives and friends.
It is called as such because of its similarity to an epidemic that easily spreads out, with an exponential growth, once an individual gets “infected.”
How did this marketing phenomenon start?
The concept of viral marketing, which is passing along a message, has been around for a long time now, even for centuries.
There was just no specific name for it until 1997 when Steve Jurvetson, a venture capitalist, came up with the term “viral marketing” to describe
Hotmail’s marketing practice then.
Hotmail’s practice was to append an advertisement of itself on each message that is sent using their service.
When a recipient gets interested and clicks on the ad, it will lead to
Hotmail’s website for him to signup.
This will go on and on, and the growth is similar to an exponential curve.
Types of Viral Marketing:
There are different ways to apply viral marketing strategy.
- Pass-along.
This is the most common type of viral marketing. Web sites that ask their
users to tell-a-friend about their products and services is an example of pass-along messaging.
However, there is a risk of the message being labeled as “spam” by email
providers.
Thus, it is important that the “from” and “subject” lines do not contain any word that may be tagged as spam.
- Incentivised viral:
This is a marketing technique used by companies in which users are offered rewards when they refer somebody to the company.
This becomes more effective when the referred person needs to take action for the reward to be given.
- Undercover:
The most difficult viral to spot, undercover marketing sends a viral message
that is disguised as just an unusual page or piece of news without obvious link citations.
- Edgy gossip or buzz marketing:
This type is most common in the entertainment world.
A good example is the spread of different controversies, like getting married or divorced, involving the stars of a movie that is yet to be released.
This is like a word-of-mouth advertising for the movie.
Methods of Transmission:
Spreading the viral message can be done in different ways.
- Email:
This is the most common type, when people forward messages such as inspirational messages, jokes, funny clips and pictures that advertises a certain product or service.
- Instant Messaging:
People who receive links from friends through instant messaging servers, like Yahoo or MSN, are more likely to check it out because of the notion of urgency
of the sender.
- Web sites:
Most of the articles now published online have a link that says “Send to a
friend.”
This is one way to make the article reach a good number of people by just posting it in one site.
- Word of mouth:
Of course, this is the traditional way of passing on a message to another
person; and most of the time, the most reliable method too.
Though there are several ways on how to do this kind of advertising, there are also barriers to it.
One was already mentioned, which is the risk of the message being labeled as “spam.”
Since a lot of companies now are using this method and promoting their products through email, email providers proactively created some sort of filter in their system to separate potential spam emails from the more trusted ones.
Other barriers can be the size and format of the viral message.
If the content is a video clip, its reach may be limited because of size limitations of most of the email providers.
Media format is also one thing to consider because not all recipients of the message may have the right application to open the file.
But despite of these constraints, businesses are already getting into this style of marketing.
Indeed, this technique helps in dramatically increasing revenues by reaching a
huge number of the target market without having to spend a big chunk of money for advertisements.
Viral marketing will definitely go a long way, especially in the World Wide Web.
Godbless, John Caldecott.
http://www.freesoftwareandebooks.com
http://www.softwarenebooks.info
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