Viral marketing happens when a story or idea takes off and spreads. The story is spread, like a virus, from one person to another through Twitter, the blog world, email, and YouTube – to name a few.
In the online community being the object of the viral campaign can bring instant fame, for free, but can you buy viral? If you or your company are being talked about, linked to, tweeted, and blogged about, then other people are telling your story.
Being viral is like being cool, but can you buy cool? Can a company spend money and resources to convince the world they are cool? Can you plot, build, and release a viral marketing campaign? Is it really viral when money is offered as a reward to Tweet or forward their message?
It seems some companies want to leap over appealing, interesting content and buy their way into the viral marketing game by enticing others to build buzz. This is the attempt of one company:
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Help Adecco Group NA recognize American workers this Labor Day – you could win $100!
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Adecco Group NA needs your help to recognize all American workers this Labor Day. By helping us, you’ll do your part to thank hard-working Americans for their contributions and you’ll also have a chance to win a $100 American Express gift card! Here’s how:
Five winners will be selected at random. Remember, every time you retweet the link to our Labor Day video before September 8, 2009 you’ll have another chance to win the $100. Thanks for following us on Twitter, good luck and enjoy your Labor Day weekend! *Maximum tweets per day is 5. |
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©2009 AdeccoGroup NA |
If you do not wish to receive any further emails from Adecco, please click here.
Adecco
175 Broadhollow Road
Melville, NY 11747
This entire campaign is an attempt to be viral:
- the offer for us to help the company recognize American workers
- the offer to win $100
- the call for help, a second time, to recognize American workers
- a third call to help them, but this time calling us out to do our part to thank hard-working Americans
- the offer of $100 as a company thank you for helping the company help American workers
- the request to follow their company on Twitter [who does this benefit?]
- the request that once we join Twitter, we retweet their exact message, that includes their link to a YouTube video
- a link to their YouTube video created to honor the American worker, but is really a commercial for their services as a temporary job placement agency – they will tell you statistics as they salute their role and their people
- their use of bit.ly and YouTube and @AdeccoGroup to track responses
In our marketing 2.0 world you have to provide relevant content. If your goal is to create content you hope will create buzz, this is retrofitting a marketing 1.0 strategy and strains credibility.
Understand your audience and write or present appealing, interesting content. If your message is valued for content and providing solutions people find valuable your goal is achieved. Download David Meerman Scott’s brilliant Viral Marketing ebook that includes many case studies and actionable tips.
After all, viral marketing should not make others sick.
Appendix: two days after I posted this, an illuminating article The Truth About Labor Day ran in the Boston Sunday Globe, Ideas Section.
See follow up Viral marketing and Twitter gone right



