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Market Your Toronto Website By Creating
a Buzz
In a 44-page study of word-of-mouth based on Toronto
Internet chat room participation, Professors David Godes (Harvard
Business School) and Dina Mayzlin (Yale School of Management) define
buzz as the transfer of information from someone who is in the know
to one who isn't. This is something that most of us understand
intrinsically- buzz is about the “next” big thing, the one that
hasn't hit yet. We hear about, and want to get in on the ground
floor, so to speak.
This phenomenon is the bread and butter of marketing people.
Creating buzz about a product is the goal of ever advertisement,
every Toronto marketing campaign, and every ad-man. In many ways, the
creation of buzz is the original alternative marketing scheme, as it
is often done outside of the traditional marketing venues of
television and print ads. While television and print ads may sustain
buzz, they are unlikely to produce it. Buzz is created by word of
mouth- it is the personal transferal of information from those in
the know to those not in the know.
The study by Godes and Mayzlin compared chat room buzz about new
Mississauga
television shows with Nielsen ratings to determine if a statistical
correlation existed. The researchers found that such a correlation
did, in fact, exist. The study also found that for buzz to have a
significant effect, word of mouth must reach across multiple
communities or newsgroups with differing demographics. Further, as
any trend-watcher could tell you, buzz, like so many other
phenomena, is relatively short-lived. At least in the case of
television shows, buzz about a particular show had faded into
background noise after about six weeks.
Everybody's Doing It
Word-of-mouth now influences two-thirds of all Mississauga consumer product
sales, according to a May 2001 report by a reputable marketing firm.
Once the exclusive province of renegade boutique agencies bringing
counterculture products to market, viral marketing has literally
spread like a cold, becoming a staple in even the most traditional
provinces.
One driving force behind this shift in advertising techniques is the
emergence of ad-blasting technologies like TiVo. Personal video
recorders (PVRs) and digital video recorders (DVRs) enable consumers
to block out the commercials that were once the bedrock of consumer
product advertising by recording a show for later viewing, and fast
forwarding through commercials. PVR users willingly opt out of
commercials some 72.3 percent of the time, a rate ringing alarm
bells among advertisers.
Another factor is pure, simple economics. The cost of a 30-second
television spot is now pushing $450,000 for a single airing during
prime-time viewing hours. That is a very large chunk of change, and
it includes nothing but the airtime. It does not include production
costs of the ad itself. Manufacturers are becoming game to try an
alternative that boasts a price tag just a fraction of that amount.
No expensive media buys, pricey location shoots or costly creative
sessions.
Then there's the powerful punch of a viral message delivered in a
seemingly personalized, one-to-one manner. When people feel that
they are personally important to a company, they are more likely to
get excited about the product. This excitement will generate more
buzz, because the receiver of this personalized, one-on-one
“advertisements” will be more likely to talk about them to their own
friends and family, coworkers and acquaintances. The network of
contacts for passing along the buzz gets larger.
These surprise, spontaneous encounters prove particularly appealing
to the media savvy cohort born between 1979 and 1994. It's no
accident that "word," as deployed by rappers everywhere, is
synonymous with truth. So too is the perception of word-of-mouth.
The personalized and personal approach appeals to Generation Y,
particularly their sense of importance. Gen Yers are convinced of
their special place in the world, and marketing that speaks to that
egoism is particularly effective. This is only natural.
Every culture and subculture, and every generation, has a specific
set of icons that define them. Advertising seeks to manipulate and
play upon these deep-seated psychological threads. Good advertising
manages to do so, bad advertising does not. Really good advertising
manages to do so without the person who is being marketed to
realizing exactly what strings have been pulled.
Word of mouth is an advertising technique that has a much higher
rate of achieving this subliminal delivery. When the marketing pitch
is being delivered in a one-on-one, personal setting, or by a
trusted, personally known acquaintance, that rate of success goes up
even more. This is why generating buzz is so desirable to marketers:
it is the epitome of advertising, without advertising. It is the
ultimate psychological assault. It is the best form of advertising
available, because it is almost guaranteed to work. A good buzz is
worth more than the most expensive, expansive television or print
campaign.
Why Word-of-Mouth Works
Complexity gives rise to confusion, confusion to isolation, and
isolation to immunity. Gladwell believes that word-of-mouth works
because, in the face of complexity, "people embrace more primitive
social bonds and turn to the very personal networks run by Mavens
and Connectors."
The initial response to complexity is confusion. As people seek more
information for clarity, it merely adds to the data overload. A
second response to complexity is isolation-the need to limit social
connections and media options to the trusted few. Eventually, people
become immune to media influence, responsive only to known
influentials.
According to Gladwell, "A great example of media immunity is the
telephone. In the beginning, when the phone rang, it was a friend
calling. Now we need caller ID to filter out the telemarketers. When
e-mail first arrived, we'd rush home to open all four or five of
them. Today we cringe at the thought of wading through hundreds of
e-mails, many unsolicited."
One way to circumvent built-up media immunity: reduce market
complexity by simplifying the product offering, from fewer SKUs to
more versatile products. Combining conditioner with shampoo in a
single product was liquid genius. So too was the convenience insight
that converted the cap on a bottle of laundry detergent into a
measuring cup for the product.
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