But I’ve
noticed that when organizations (and their agencies) set out to go
viral, the vast majority of their campaigns fail. It is virtually impossible to
create a Web marketing program that is guaranteed to go viral; it requires a
huge amount of luck and timing. That’s an important point to remember as you work
on viral marketing ideas, because it’s unlike the old-rules, numbers-based
marketing techniques you’re probably used to. Consider a direct mail campaign:
You could always count on a direct mail piece to generate a known number of
responses, say 2 percent. So if you needed to have 100 people respond, you sent
out 5,000 mailers. Easy, right?
Viral
marketing is much different. You just can’t count on numbers in the same way.
Many efforts fail miserably, and there are countless Web sites, e-books, and
videos that only their creators’ mothers and bosses have seen. However,
tomorrow those same marketers might get lucky and get a million people to view
their content, driving tens of thousands of people’s interest in their products
and services.
However, this
importance of timing and luck shouldn’t discourage you from using viral marketing
techniques; you just need to learn how to turn the odds in your favor.
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