Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Musketeer Journalism - The Viral Marketing Experiment


Hey guys!

As you know, we are entering a new age, a digital age that is changing on a daily basis. It is incredibly important that journalists stay abreast of these changes, as the digital age is reshaping traditional forms of media. It isn't that journalism is dying; it is just getting ready for a rebirth. We must prepare ourselves for this rebirth.

We read excerpts of an Esquire article on David Plouffe yesterday, the campaign manager for Barack Obama during the last election. Plouffe embraced the role of new media; his use of the web during the campaign was pivotal to Obama's success. With a beautiful website that enticed readers to submit contact information for marketing purposes, an email list with 13 million live email addresses that allowed the campaign to get their message out quickly and easily, an iPhone application that explained his positions on key topics and locations of local rallies, and a combination of social network marketing gimmicks, Plouffe was able to engineer Obama's historic victory.

With traditional newspaper readership at low levels, and our newspaper readership lagging, we must do something to get the word out about our newspaper. We also need to understand and embrace the use of marketing in doing so - self-promotion is an integral part of the journalism industry. Taking a page from Plouffe's book, we are going to develop a viral marketing campaign for En Garde! the newspaper. The viral marketing campaign can either be in-school, web-based, or real world. It may also include some combination of these approaches.

This assignment is going to be part social experiment, part marketing for our newspaper, and part plain fun.

Procedure:

1. First, I will be splitting you into groups of five. As a group, you are to read the Six Principles of Viral Marketing post on Musketeer Journalism, in addition to the information at the following links:

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/869/politics-goes-viral-online.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1184060,00.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/12/AR2007111200042_2.html
http://www.usatoday.com/money/advertising/2005-06-22-viral-usat_x.htm
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/18/business/media/18adco.html

2. You will then be asked to come up with a viral marketing campaign. This campaign will be broken up into three separate sections, each worth 75 points for each team member. THIS MEANS THAT EACH MEMBER MUST BE INVOLVED IN EACH STEP IN THE PROCESS.

A. THE PITCH

Your group will be asked to come up with a viral media campaign idea, and will pitch it to the class as you would to a conventional advertising company or promotional team. Your presentation will last approximately 10 minutes and must discuss what the idea is, how you came up with the idea, how you intend to implement the idea, what effect you hope the idea will have, how you intend to measure the success of the idea, and a visual aid that will assist you in showing the class how you plan to deliver your idea.

B. THE DELIVERY

Your group will then be asked to implement the idea. If your idea is to take place outside the school, you will be expected to work on parts of it in class during the assigned work time.

C. THE FOLLOW-THROUGH

Your group will then be required to post personal responses to blogspot in which you discuss the successes and failures of the assignment. This part of the assignment will be posted on blogspot closer to the due date.


At this point, I am sure that some of you have no idea how this might look, so I am going to give you an example. One group decides that they are going to take advantage of word-of-mouth by collecting cellphone numbers and emails and sending out a series of cryptic text messages leading up to the announcement of the new-and-improved En Garde!
They establish an exciting looking booth in the gravel pit area at lunch time one day that advertises something NEW! SOMETHING EXCITING! SOMETHING DIFFERENT! SOMETHING SO AMAZING AND STUPENDOUS, WE CAN'T TELL YOU WHAT IT IS...YET! This booth then collects a 'contact list' of emails and phone numbers, with the promise that students will be 'contacted when the reveal will take place'. By collecting the data, we have essentially found the way that students will be best contacted about the school newspaper, and we can use that to get the word out. This approach will also have a significant word-of-mouth effect - people will talk about it.


This will be a challenging assignment, but I believe that you will find it to be fun, rewarding, and informative. Expect to receive
rubrics determining how grades will be awarded in the next 2-3 days. This assignment will be completed within the next two non-publishing weeks for En Garde!

Good luck!

Mr. Parsons
GCHS Journalism

WHAT IS VIRAL MARKETING?



I admit it. The term "viral marketing" is offensive. Call yourself a Viral Marketer and people will take two steps back. I would. "Do they have a vaccine for that yet?" you wonder. A sinister thing, the simple virus is fraught with doom, not quite dead yet not fully alive, it exists in that nether genre somewhere between disaster movies and horror flicks.

But you have to admire the virus. He has a way of living in secrecy until he is so numerous that he wins by sheer weight of numbers. He piggybacks on other hosts and uses their resources to increase his tribe. And in the right environment, he grows exponentially. A virus don't even have to mate -- he just replicates, again and again with geometrically increasing power, doubling with each iteration:

1
11
1111
11111111
1111111111111111
11111111111111111111111111111111
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

In a few short generations, a virus population can explode.

Viral Marketing Defined

What does a virus have to do with marketing? Viral marketing describes any strategy that encourages individuals to pass on a marketing message to others, creating the potential for exponential growth in the message's exposure and influence. Like viruses, such strategies take advantage of rapid multiplication to explode the message to thousands, to millions.

Off the Internet, viral marketing has been referred to as "word-of-mouth," "creating a buzz," "leveraging the media," "network marketing." But on the Internet, for better or worse, it's called "viral marketing." While others smarter than I have attempted to rename it, to somehow domesticate and tame it, I won't try. The term "viral marketing" has stuck.

The Classic Hotmail.com Example

The classic example of viral marketing is Hotmail.com, one of the first free Web-based e-mail services. The strategy is simple:

Give away free e-mail addresses and services,
Attach a simple tag at the bottom of every free message sent out: "Get your private, free email at http://www.hotmail.com" and,
Then stand back while people e-mail to their own network of friends and associates,
Who see the message,
Sign up for their own free e-mail service, and then
Propel the message still wider to their own ever-increasing circles of friends and associates.
Like tiny waves spreading ever farther from a single pebble dropped into a pond, a carefully designed viral marketing strategy ripples outward extremely rapidly.

Elements of a Viral Marketing Strategy

Accept this fact. Some viral marketing strategies work better than others, and few work as well as the simple Hotmail.com strategy. But below are the six basic elements you hope to include in your strategy. A viral marketing strategy need not contain ALL these elements, but the more elements it embraces, the more powerful the results are likely to be. An effective viral marketing strategy:

Gives away products or services
Provides for effortless transfer to others
Scales easily from small to very large
Exploits common motivations and behaviors
Utilizes existing communication networks
Takes advantage of others' resources
Let's examine at each of these elements briefly.

1. Gives away valuable products or services

"Free" is the most powerful word in a marketer's vocabulary. Most viral marketing programs give away valuable products or services to attract attention. Free e-mail services, free information, free "cool" buttons, free software programs that perform powerful functions but not as much as you get in the "pro" version. Wilson's Second Law of Web Marketing is "The Law of Giving and Selling" (http://www.wilsonweb.com/wmta/basic-principles.htm). "Cheap" or "inexpensive" may generate a wave of interest, but "free" will usually do it much faster. Viral marketers practice delayed gratification. They may not profit today, or tomorrow, but if they can generate a groundswell of interest from something free, they know they will profit "soon and for the rest of their lives" (with apologies to "Casablanca"). Patience, my friends. Free attracts eyeballs. Eyeballs then see other desirable things that you are selling, and, presto! you earn money. Eyeballs bring valuable e-mail addresses, advertising revenue, and e-commerce sales opportunities. Give away something, sell something.

2. Provides for effortless transfer to others

Public health nurses offer sage advice at flu season: stay away from people who cough, wash your hands often, and don't touch your eyes, nose, or mouth. Viruses only spread when they're easy to transmit. The medium that carries your marketing message must be easy to transfer and replicate: e-mail, website, graphic, software download. Viral marketing works famously on the Internet because instant communication has become so easy and inexpensive. Digital format make copying simple. From a marketing standpoint, you must simplify your marketing message so it can be transmitted easily and without degradation. Short is better. The classic is: "Get your private, free email at http://www.hotmail.com." The message is compelling, compressed, and copied at the bottom of every free e-mail message.

3. Scales easily from small to very large

To spread like wildfire the transmission method must be rapidly scalable from small to very large. The weakness of the Hotmail model is that a free e-mail service requires its own mailservers to transmit the message. If the strategy is wildly successful, mailservers must be added very quickly or the rapid growth will bog down and die. If the virus multiplies only to kill the host before spreading, nothing is accomplished. So long as you have planned ahead of time how you can add mailservers rapidly you're okay. You must build in scalability to your viral model.

4. Exploits common motivations and behaviors

Clever viral marketing plans take advantage of common human motivations. What proliferated "Netscape Now" buttons in the early days of the Web? The desire to be cool. Greed drives people. So does the hunger to be popular, loved, and understood. The resulting urge to communicate produces millions of websites and billions of e-mail messages. Design a marketing strategy that builds on common motivations and behaviors for its transmission, and you have a winner.

5. Utilizes existing communication networks

Most people are social. Nerdy, basement-dwelling computer science grad students are the exception. Social scientists tell us that each person has a network of 8 to 12 people in their close network of friends, family, and associates. A person's broader network may consist of scores, hundreds, or thousands of people, depending upon her position in society. A waitress, for example, may communicate regularly with hundreds of customers in a given week. Network marketers have long understood the power of these human networks, both the strong, close networks as well as the weaker networked relationships. People on the Internet develop networks of relationships, too. They collect e-mail addresses and favorite website URLs. Affiliate programs exploit such networks, as do permission e-mail lists. Learn to place your message into existing communications between people, and you rapidly multiply its dispersion.

6. Takes advantage of others' resources

The most creative viral marketing plans use others' resources to get the word out. Affiliate programs, for example, place text or graphic links on others' websites. Authors who give away free articles, seek to position their articles on others' webpages. A news release can be picked up by hundreds of periodicals and form the basis of articles seen by hundreds of thousands of readers. Now someone else's newsprint or webpage is relaying your marketing message. Someone else's resources are depleted rather than your own.

Put into practice


Viral Marketing
by Russell Goldsmith


The Secrets of Word-of-Mouth Marketing by George Silverman

I grant permission for every reader to reproduce on your website the article you are now reading -- "The Six Simple Principles of Viral Marketing" (see http://www.wilsonweb.com/wmt5/viral-principles-clean.htm for an HTML version you can copy). But copy this article ONLY, without any alteration whatsoever. Include the copyright statement, too, please. If you have a marketing or small business website, it'll provide great content and help your visitors learn important strategies. (NOTE: I am giving permission to host on your website this article AND NO OTHERS. Reprinting or hosting my articles without express written permission is illegal, immoral, and a violation of my copyright.)

When I first offered this to my readers in February 2000, many took me up on it. Six months later a received a phone call:

"I want to speak to the King of Viral Marketing!"
"Well, I'm not the King," I demurred. "I wrote an article about viral marketing a few months ago, but that's all."
"I've searched all over the Internet about viral marketing," he said, "and your name keeps showing up. You must be the King!."
It worked! Even five years later this webpage is ranked #1 for "viral marketing."

To one degree or another, all successful viral marketing strategies use most of the six principles outlined above. In the next article in this series, "Viral Marketing Techniques the Typical Business Website Can Deploy Now" (http://www.wilsonweb.com/wmt5/viral-deploy.htm), we'll move from theory to practice. But first learn these six foundational principles of viral marketing. Master them and wealth will flow your direction.

"Copyright © 2000, 2005, Ralph F. Wilson, E-Mail Marketing and Online Marketing editor, Web Marketing Today. All rights reserved. Permission granted to reprint this article on your website without alteration if you include this copyright statement and leave the hyperlinks live and in place."