Viral Marketing. Not As Contagious As You Might Think

Viral marketing is surely the ultimate form of marketing: you create something once, and then, with no effort on your part, word about your article, game, movie, product or website (or whatever it is) gets spread to others, who spread it to others, who in turn spread it to more people, and the result is non-stop, ever-growing traffic and sales.

Sounds like a dream… and, unfortunately, for most Internet marketers who create viral campaigns, such results are only the stuff of dreams. The reality is that (a) Internet marketers engaged in viral marketing have to put a considerable amount of work – and sometimes lots of money – into developing such campaigns and (b) most of them don’t become viral at all.

In fact, calling something a viral marketing campaign is a bit of a misnomer since it’s only viral if it has, indeed, exhibited viral characteristics i.e. growth in the pass-along consumption of the content has been exponentially self-perpetuating. So you can’t really ‘develop’ a viral campaign; you can really only hope that a particular marketing campaign will become viral. Still, we’ll describe such campaigns as ‘viral’ for the sake of convenience.

So what’s the reality concerning viral marketing? Well, recent research shows that while 24 percent of Internet marketers attempt viral initiatives, only 15 percent of such campaigns actually induce the spread of the relevant marketing message. Meanwhile, far from being a cheap form of marketing, many attempted viral or word of mouth marketing campaigns involve expensive development e.g. the development of ingenious or cool games and costly seeding i.e. planting news of the campaign on social media sites and elsewhere.

The hit and miss nature of viral marketing means that no-one can really ensure a successful campaign. Still we can look at the campaigns that have been successful and identify some common factors that may be indicative of why they were so successful.

Some of these common factors are: offering free content of high perceived value, utilizing a fairly effortless way for people to pass along the content, and, in terms of seeding the campaign, making it highly rewarding for people to promote the content in the first place.

These are fairly generic factors but, in the absence of a sure-fire recipe for viral success, we can’t really go beyond describing the fairly general factors for success. While the pay-off from a viral marketing campaign can be enormous, it is far from certain.

For that reason, while I would definitely encourage Internet marketers to try viral marketing and to implement viral elements in your marketing – e.g. buttons at the bottom of blog articles to allow people to bookmark or ‘retweet’ your articles – I would never advise you to rest your entire business on viral initiatives. Base your online marketing, instead, on tried and true approaches; use viral campaigns to supplement or complement but never to replace such approaches.


Anna Johnson publishes Internet marketing newsletter, Kikabink News. Get a FREE subscription to Kikabink News as well as a FREE copy of Anna’s ebook, Killer Internet Marketing Tips, plus four FREE killer 60+ minute audio interviews with top Internet marketers: http://www.kikabink.com/kt/tips.htm

Five Hidden Pitfalls When Naming Your New Company or New Product

Youre exhausted from several rounds of brainstorming and finally pick a name that seems to convey what you want to say. Your legal eagles clear it, and you start incorporating the name everywhere on the web, on T-shirts, on stationery and business cards and in correspondence with potential investors or customers.

But oops! You didnt notice that your name carries one or more of these five slowly sabotaging disadvantages

Hidden Pitfall #1: The name cant be said aloud fast and clearly. Ever called a law firm only to be totally unsure what the receptionist said when picking up the line? Certain combinations of sounds are tongue twisters to say quickly and do not come across clearly to the ear.

For instance, if you named your retail shop Maps, Books, Mugs, Bangles, this four-word name might look great on signage and in newspaper ads. But anyone whose job it was to pick up the phone and say it fifty times a day would soon be in despair. Someone once told me that when I reeled off the name of my publicity book, they heard it as Six Debts to Free Publicity instead of Six Steps. I learned to pause an extra millisecond after six to get the name across. But I dont think its viable to try to salvage Maps, Books, Mugs, Bangles in that way.

Hidden Pitfall #2: People cant spell it. Pity the folks at Cuil, a search engine trying to take business away from Google. “Cuil is an old Irish word for knowledge,” says the company on its About page. Newspaper articles about the company note that it is pronounced like cool. To most Americans, however, it looks like a nonsensical and unpronounceable combination of letters.

When the Internet is key to a companys success, a hard-to-spell name can be a fatal obstacle. If someone gets interested and hears the company name as Quill or Cool and looks at quill.com or cool.com, the company has lost the benefit of that publicity or word of mouth. Quite a different kind of spelling problem comes up when someone hears 24-7 Cleaning and doesnt know whether to look for it as starting with 2 or t and whether it contains a hyphen or a slash between 24 and 7.

Hidden Pitfall #3: The name restricts growth. Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing quickly grew beyond selling sandpaper and wisely changed its moniker to 3M, a name that fits just about any kind of innovation or invention. Banks often run into this pitfall when they tie their identity to a town or county and try to expand into territory that belongs to another area in customers minds.

Examples of restrictive restaurant names that seemed advantageous until tastes changed include Pizza Hut, which is now struggling to be known for other foods besides pizza, and any name containing pasta, which used to sound European but now sounds fattening.

Hidden Pitfall #4: Theres an embarrassing connotation you werent aware of. Although English is spoken and written in many parts of the world, regional and national differences include slang or obscenity thats unknown across the ocean. This pitfall trips up some local or national companies that may do fine until they try to become known online, where people in another corner of the world begin to get shocked or snicker at the name.

For example, the founder of Nobscot Corporation came from New England, where Nobscot is an honorable Native American place name. However, she later learned that in old England, the name raises eyebrows because nob is slang there for a part of the male anatomy. Likewise, My Daily Flog, a photo sharing site, is not likely to become popular in Australia, where flog means a solitary practice not normally discussed in polite company.

Hidden Pitfall #5: You dont really like it. Before committing to your top name choice, try it out for a couple of days in casual conversation. You may find you feel embarrassed about it or shy about saying it. To make the new product or company successful, you must feel 100% comfortable talking about it, so this wont do. You need a different name. I’ve seen people invent a business identity that they can’t bring themselves to spread wholeheartedly and their whole investment goes to waste.

Take extra time during naming to make sure youve thought of every way in which you plan to use a name and that the name works in those contexts. This ensures you wont face a choice between continuing with a name thats slowly sapping the potential of what it stands for or taking on the expense of rebranding what youve already put out into the world.

Name your company or product so it can last!


Marcia Yudkin is Head Stork of Named At Last, which brainstorms creative business names, product names and taglines. For a systematic process of generating an effective name or tagline, download FREE “19 Steps to the Perfect Company Name, Product Name or Tagline” at http://www.namedatlast.com/19steps.htm