The B2B Lead Vidcast – A Case Study in Viral Video Marketing
Wednesday, December 5th, 2007Attention Conservation Notice: The following post contains a long post on controversy in the field of viral marketing and a long (30 min) video case study on viral video marketing presented by Pam O’Neal Mickelson. It presents advice on what to do and what not to do when it comes to producing and distributing a viral marketing campaign.
Viral video marketing has become a hotbed of controversy these days! Who would have believed that videos like Netcosm, Mr. Happy Crack, Benny Lava, and Tay Zonday could be tainted by heated debates over the validity of viral marketing and the techniques used by some to promote their campaigns?
Still the debate rages: Many B2B Marketers think viral marketing is like “lightening in a bottle.” They advise there is no simple formula and you cannot possibly orchestrate such a campaign because both content and timing are so critical to viral success. Others, will argue that they can concoct a viral campaign for anyone and will go to just about any lengths to do so.
While most will agree that content and timing are both crucial, I do believe that almost every B2B Marketer has a successful viral or Word of Mouth campaign in them. And, I also believe that they don’t have to resort to trickery or deceit to attract tens of thousands of viewers for their YouTube video. In fact, I believe the more authentic you are, the stronger the Word of Mouth effect. Let me explain.
The B2B viral video campaign NetQoS ran earlier in 2007 is a case study in how to package relevant and compelling content and get the word out to the right audience using Social Media. We used entertaining content that was compelling to our target audience, played down production value and branding, and then got the word out to the people who cared – technology professionals. We didn’t trick viewers into YouTube with headlines like “Stolen NASCAR” just to boost our numbers. By taking this high road we were able to generate more than 66,000 views, and importantly almost 2,000 leads and a half a million dollars in pipeline.
Unfortunately, not all B2B Marketers are using a transparent or authentic approach. A recent widely criticized Tech Crunch post written by Dan Ackerman Greenberg advising marketers to pay for blog coverage and trick viewers into viewing videos has triggered a firestorm of controversy that threatens to ruin the discipline for the rest of us. Much like spammers ruined email marketing.
Greenberg kicks off his post with this inauspicious intro: “Over the past year, I have run clandestine marketing campaigns meant to ensure that promotional videos become truly viral, as these examples have become in the extreme.” He might as well have run an ad inviting people to bash him. Or was that his intent? This is almost as bad as the sales letter I received from a company offering to post “laudatory comments” on our video postings or blog articles in an effort to build a following. I felt like I needed to take a shower after reading that letter and this post! (As you’ll read later I was not the only one.)
Greenberg also advised “So how do we get the first 50,000 views we need to get our videos onto the Most Viewed list?
- Blogs: We reach out to individuals who run relevant blogs and actually pay them to post our embedded videos. Sounds a little bit like cheating/PayPerPost, but it’s effective and it’s not against any rules.
- Forums: We start new threads and embed our videos. Sometimes, this means kickstarting the conversations by setting up multiple accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedious and time-consuming, but if we get enough people working on it, it can have a tremendous effect.
- MySpace: Plenty of users allow you to embed YouTube videos right in the comments section of their MySpace pages. We take advantage of this.
- Facebook: Share, share, share. We’ve taken Dave McClure’s advice and built a sizeable presence on Facebook, so sharing a video with our entire friends list can have a real impact. Other ideas include creating an event that announces the video launch and inviting friends, writing a note and tagging friends, or posting the video on Facebook Video with a link back to the original YouTube video.
- Email lists: Send the video to an email list. Depending on the size of the list (and the recipients’ willingness to receive links to YouTube videos), this can be a very effective strategy.
- Friends: Make sure everyone we know watches the video and try to get them to email it out to their friends, or at least share it on Facebook.
As you can imagine, Greenberg’s post was slammed big time for advocating “techniques including writing fake sensational titles and creating controversy by having arguments in the comments of a video using multiple YouTube accounts.” I can’t help but notice, however, that while Greenberg may be unpopular with the readers of Tech Crunch, he is apparently very popular among advertisers. A look at both the quantity and the prominence of his clients shows that there is huge demand and high stakes around viral marketing.
Viral video, much like televised infotainment, remains one of the best ways to broadcast your brand and message to a very large audience. Combine it with a blog or other social media component, and it can be an ingenious way to build a large following. And, unlike televised infotainment, it doesn’t come with a multi-million dollar price tag. The NetQoS viral video project, for example, cost only $6,500 to produce and will likely generate a 6,000+% ROI. Importantly, viral campaigns come with the added bonus of Word of Mouth cache. Viewers are guaranteed to tune in when the content has been recommended by a friend or colleague, or when the buzz has reached a level that demands their attention.
It’s easy to see why companies such as Greenberg’s firm are in high demand. And, while what he does may feel unethical and deceptive, is it really so different from the infotainment that we call reality TV? I mean, wasn’t The Apprentice just one long commercial for Burger King and Yahoo? Isn’t Project Runway a great promotional vehicle for Banana Republic and Bitten by Sarah Jessica Parker? Aren’t these all examples of Marketing disguised as entertainment? Aren’t we, as viewers, tricked into tuning in to these hour-long commercials by slickly produced teasers of apprentices battling to the finish or snarky fashion designers back stabbing each other to get ahead?
In an increasingly marketing-averse world, tricking your audience into tuning in may seem the only way to get your message out. But this is extremely short sighted. If you’re not looking at viral marketing with a long term perspective, you are over looking one of the most valuable aspects of this approach – the ability to quickly and inexpensively build a community of interest. The Word of Mouth aspect of viral marketing gives Marketers a powerful way to attract a following of media, blogerati, influencers, and–most importantly–buyers.
As this video case study of the NetQoS network monitoring campaign illustrates, just about anyone can be successful with viral marketing if they take an authentic, transparent, relevant and entertaining approach. Look at the fantastic job Dr. Pepper did with the Cherry Chocolate Rain viral video or this clever Symantec video. It may not always guarantee a million views, but it will earn you respect and a loyal following over the long term.
In the next B2B Lead post I’ll enumerate the 20 ideas that made the NetQoS campaign a success leading to a Marketing Sherpa Viral Marketing Hall of Fame inclusion. I’ll also present some of the visuals that might have been difficult to see on this video.
Marketing WTF? - Dr. Pepper Exploits Tay Zonday Chocolate Rain Video
Tuesday, December 4th, 2007Sheer genius. This Dr. Pepper version of the Tay Zonday Chocolate Rain Video is hysterical and very nicely produced. I love the clever “viral” look introduction combined with the surprise MTV-style production. Also, nice job with the subtle branding near the end.
B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #44 - Twitter to Attract Readers to Your Blog
Tuesday, November 27th, 2007Blog Master…Not just shared the best way (If You Build It, They Will Come) to attract readers to your blog in a recent post to The B2B Lead.
Here’s another: Microblogging. Most people I know are absolutely perplexed by the value of microblogging sites like Twitter, Pownce, Seesmic or Jaiku. I’ll spare you the details of the conversation it spawned with my husband the engineer. Personally, I use Twitter and I love it. Don’t always have time to use it, but when I do, it’s amazing. It can also be very powerful. In fact, we presented a podcast on the subject by a real Twitter expert – William Hurley or whurley (listen here). Whurley was able to build a huge following for his Opensville Blog. So much so that his blog rose to a Technorati ranking of 196 in a few short months. Want to benchmark that stat? The B2B Lead is currently ranked 2,910,025. (come on guys, give us a little link love here.)
When you immerse yourself in the community and start sending “tweets”, as they are called, it’s easy to see how powerful these tools would be for building a following and driving readers to your blog. That is—if you have something interesting to say. After all, as the fine folks over at FiveRuns say “don’t wake up the dog to tell it it’s sleeping.” My advice: don’t register for Twitter with the idea that you’ll really share exactly what you’re doing at any giving moment. After all, most of us really don’t care what you had for lunch (bad for the diet), how long the line is at the bank, or who you were having lunch with today (that’s just name dropping).
What we do care about is: the neat idea you just had, your cool new project, a happy hour forming in your city, your latest brush with greatness, the exciting new product you just bought, a hot new company on your radar screen, or a new sale on shoes! OK, maybe that’s just me. Anyway, you get the picture. Think Word of Mouth. Or, Word of Mouth 2.0.
Twitter has become my way to become an “insider.” As an avid blogger and social media enthusiast, I follow Robert Scoble, the author of Naked Conversations—the definitive text on the culture of blogging. His tweets turn me on to the most amazing products and ideas. Toys like the WiFi detector t-shirt (http://www.thinkgeek.com/tshirts/generic/991e/) . Cool multi-media tools like www.vuvox.com. He wrote an excellent article on microblogging for Fastcompany Magazine. In the piece, he speculates that the step from e-mail to microblogging may be as significant as from fax to e-mail in the 90’s.
Hans De Keulenaer also provided some excellent tips for microblogging on his Web Business Marketing Blog. He suggests:
- Daily tips and tricks: energy saving, use of a software package, … But consider, how quickly will you run out of steam?
- Quick reporting from a roadshow, tradeshow, … Microblogging can be easily done from mobile devices. It allows you to communicate broader about your event for the folks not there, while you are busy with the event.
- Information during a crisis, when aid workers have essential information, but no time.
- Animate events, such as a conference or trade fair, showing announcements of participants on a giant screen.
At NetQoS, we are integrating a “Follow NetQoS Symposium 08 on Twitter” feature in our customer symposium web site and considering working it into our corporate blog strategy. For the customer event, we will use it to share developments in the itinerary, speakers as they sign on, encourage feedback, etc. We think it will help us build a community of interest and encourage registrations for the event. As adoption grows, we will expand use to organize events at major trade shows, etc. The options are only limited by the imagination.
Like these ideas? Follow me on Twitter (http://twitter.com/poneal). Want to microblog with your voice – post a recording at Utterz (http://www.utterz.com). Not convinced? Read more about Microblogging: Microblogging:What Is It Good For?
B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #37 - B2B Loves Monkey Jokes
Friday, November 9th, 2007Submitted by Jonas Lamis
Inspired by Pam O’Neal Mickelson’s recent presentation on Viral B2B videos, I’ve been searching for other examples that might actually drive purchasing. I came across one today…
The IT Room teaser: http://theitroom.com/index.php
I found the link embedded in a TechCrunch advertisement and had to check it out. While the company behind this serial Geeks gone Wild save Corporate America with a Monkey remains obscured (at least on the surface) I cant help but wonder why the video “player” has a discrete DELL brand at the bottom.
Regardless, I’ve added it to my RSS feeds as the teaser episode was entertaining enough to make me want more. Plus - and a big plus, the video streamed through my company’s firewall. This is something that Youtube videos don’t do, and something that marketers should be aware of as they consider B2B video.
Marketing WTF? - Say Hello to Mr. Happy Crack
Thursday, October 25th, 2007
Yep, you heard me, Mr. Happy Crack. The clever folks at Crack Team USA Inc. in St. Louis have managed to make a successful viral video campaign for their concrete repair business. According to the Wall Street Journal Independent Street blog:
“The video doesn’t preach, it’s not blatantly advertorial (at least in the beginning), it emphasizes brand over product and you might watch it even if you’re not in the market to get a crack repaired. Though chances are good that, next time you do, you’ll think of this company first.”
Check it out at:
http://blogs.wsj.com/independentstreet/2007/10/17/cracking-youtube-marketing-even-if-youre-boring/
B2B Marketing and Sales Tips #32 - Take a Crash Course in B2B Marketing with These Marketing Sherpa B2B Summit Lessons
Wednesday, October 24th, 2007Disclaimer: Shameless self-promotion follows. MarketingSherpa just published this summary of lessons learned from its Boston Summit last week. I had the privilege of joining a number of B-to-B Marketers who shared their successes in the area of demand generation, Viral marketing, and Web 2.0. Here’s the blurb about the NetQoS viral campaign:
Experiment with low-cost video. Video content is hot, but don’t assume the only effective videos are slick, broadcast-quality pieces with high production values. As long as the content is fun, engaging and relevant to your target audience, it can create a huge buzz.
Pam O’Neal, Senior Director, Marketing Communications, NetQoS, described a viral video campaign she developed based on a simple, animated depiction of network traffic developed by one of her in-house engineers. After creating a microsite for the video piece, posting it to YouTube, and seeding a few key industry sites with mentions of the demonstration, she created a viral video phenomenon that delivered a 6330% return on investment and cost per qualified lead of just $16.
“Always have your flip camera ready. [Video] doesn’t have to have high production values. When something great happens, be there to capture it,” said O’Neal.
Of course, this was just the tip of the iceberg. If you’re interested in the full presentation, stay tuned for –what else? a video of the presentation to be posted the day after the West Coast B2B Summit.
The B2B Lead Podcast #4 – Adapt or Die – Marketing and PR in the Blogosphere and New Media
Monday, October 15th, 2007As new media has pushed its way into B2B marketing, many marketing departments reacted by hiring a specialist to tackle these new forms of marketing and PR, especially blogs. But as these new media have come to replace many traditional media and really become now media, all marketers need to accept blogging and twitter and YouTube and become educated, so that not just one member of your marketing organization understands these communities. In this podcast, I interview Josh Dilworth to discuss the changing landscape of marketing and PR in new media.
The B2B Lead Podcast #3 – Making a Viral Campaign Successful - Seeding
Monday, October 15th, 2007The thought of undertaking a viral campaign may seem a bit daunting. But say you have created the perfect video, now how do you actually get the right people to view it and pass it on – the whole point of a viral campaign. In this podcast, listen to my interview with Josh Dilworth at Porter Novelli to explore how detailed planning and execution of the seeding component made my viral campaign at NetQoS a major success.
Anti-virus Software Company Unleashes a Viral Marketing Pandemic
Thursday, October 4th, 2007Take a look at this wonderfully cheesy YouTube video from Symantec, the makers of Norton Anti-virus software.
Their web site is even better http://www.nortonfighter.com/.










