Viral Marketing:An Insight: January 08
Viral Marketing:An Insight: January 08
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Saumya Singh | B.COM (HONORS) IIIRD YEAR | ROLL NO. 348 Under the supervision of Ms. Sonia Department of Commerce Shri Ram college of Commerce, University of Delhi Delhi- 110007
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UNDERTAKING
This is to certify that the project work entitled, VIRAL MARKETING :AN INSIGHT has been completed by me under the supervision of Ms. Sonia ,Shri Ram College of commerce, University of Delhi , is in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the paper number XXXVII for the award of the degree of B.Com.(H), University of Delhi, Delhi. I further certify that this project is an original work and has not been submitted anywhere else for the award of any other degree or diploma.
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INDEX
I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. ACKNOWLEDEMENT INTRODUCTION HISTORY OF VIRAL MARKETING 4 5-6 7-8
VIRAL MARKETING COMMUNICATION 9 GOALS AND TARGET GROUPS TYPES AND STRATERGIES VIRAL MARKETING MIX 10 11-15 16-17 18-19 20-22 23-28 29 30
VIII. ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES IX. CONSUMERS RESPONSE X. CASE STUDY AND EXAMPLES XI. CONCLUSION XII. BIBLIOGRAPY
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I sincerely wish to express my deep sense of gratitude to my mentor Ms. Sonia, whose keen interest, valuable guidance; constructive comments and suggestions have enabled me to complete this project work. I would also like to thank my parents, friends and all others who have extended full cooperation and encouragement during the course of this project work.
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Internet marketing has evolved into a major marketing branch for many existing companies. Many new enterprises see the effectiveness and advantages of electronic business by not being limited by time and distance when engaging in business activity. The opportunities to do business worldwide with the click of mouse are enormous and enticing. The skyrocketing success of Hotmail.com has shaken the Internet marketing world encouraging entrepreneur to develop marketing concepts and to convince capital venture companies to finance them. In the current competitive business world, every business owners look different methods to promote their business, globally. One of the widely available, familiar and successful marketing strategies is Viral Marketing. Viral Marketing describes any strategy that encourages individuals to pass on a marketing message to others, creating the potential for exponential growth in the message's exposure and influence. Like viruses, such strategies take advantage of rapid multiplication to explode the message to thousands to millions. Viral marketing is practise by business organization who is engaged in e-commerce.
CONCEPT
1. The central idea is that people will pass on and share interesting and entertaining content forwarding it to their friends and colleagues; the content of which is often sponsored by a brand that is looking to build awareness of a product or service. 2. Viral marketing uses pre-existing social networks to produce exponential increases in awareness through self-replicating viral processes. Basically it is marketing that appears to work much the same as a cold virus, spreading from person to person explosively 3. Influencers are used to make peer-to-peer product recommendations. 4. It is a type of promotion based on circulation of ideas via word of mouth process Viral marketing has been the buzz word for businesses for the last ten years. Customers act as advertisers by promoting a product through word of mouth. The communication networks of the customers are used to transmit promotional material thereby drastically lowering the costs of customer acquisition. The reason for transfer of the communication is the human nature to share to share an interesting discovery with friends or colleagues? Those people that you shared your discovery with will share your discovery with his/her friends or colleagues. This process is called going viral. In other words, it is idea that spread and while spreading, it helps advertise your business. Viral marketing is popular because of
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the ease of executing the marketing campaign, relative low-cost, good targeting, and the high and rapid response rate. The main strength of viral marketing is its ability to obtain a large number of interested people at low cost. In unprecedented short time it expands network to mammoth figures.
Now take a look at the representation below: X XX XXX XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
A FIGURE REPRESENTATING EXPANSION OF NETWORK AS A RESULT OF VIRAL COMMUNICATION. Thats how virus multiplies, doubling itself at every step. That is exactly the way viral marketing grows too. Viral marketing is seemed to be stimulated by the availability of large number of broadband users with internet connection
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In 1984 Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet stated, contrary to principal theories about mass media communication of the 40s, that the mass media has limited effects in the process of mass persuasion. These authors questioned the validity of the bullet theory or the hypodermic-needle theory. This theory predicts that mass communication messages have a strong and universal effect on all the members of the audience who are exposed to them. They concluded that opinions and attitudes of individuals are rooted in the social spheres they belong, and mass media do not influence directly the audiences. In fact, they influence a reduced group of individuals (influencers or opinion leaders).They interpret the message of the mass media and spread it though their interpersonal relationships (two-step flow in the effect of mass media).
Lazarsfeld and Katz (1955) investigated the role of the personal influence in the daily household purchase decisions. They found that members of interpersonal communication networks (family, friends and colleagues) were the most important source of influence in the purchase of household goods and food products. They concluded that personal influence, which was called later word of mouth by Ditcher (1966) and Merton (1968), was seven times as effective as newspapers and magazines, four times as effective as personal selling, and twice as effective as radio advertising in influencing consumers to switch brands. Merton (1968) was one of the first authors who coined the term word of mouth communication. He defined this concept as a process of personal influence, in which interpersonal communications between a sender and a receiver can change the receivers behavior or attitudes. The influence of personal sources as friends, relatives or colleagues plays a fundamental role in affecting perceptions and attitudes. Since the 1960s several studies have documented the importance and determinant influence of word of mouth on consumer behavior. Customers pay 7
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more attention to word of mouth because it is perceived as a reliable source of information. The senders of the message (friends, relatives, colleagues, etc.) are seen by the consumer as having no self-interest in promoting a product or a brand.Viral Marketing is a term which is used to describe how companies use the technologies of the Information Age like internet and World Wide Web to create an intense expansion of the older concept of Word-of-mouth marketing. As a Result there has been need to distinguish between word of mouth and viral marketing. BASIS DEFINATION VIRAL MARKETING Viral marketing is the promotion of a company or its products and services through a persuasive message designed to spread, typically online, from person to person. WORD OF MOUTH Word of Mouth is the promotion of a company or its products and services through an initiative conceived and designed to get people talking positively about that company, product or service Make people talk positively about product or brand in order to change or reinforce consumers attitudes and behaviours. All interpersonal communications in which is included the Internet;
FOCUS
MODE
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The roots of the term viral marketing and its popularization have been debated, but it is believed to have been coined by Harvard Business School faculty member Jeffrey Rayport and Harvard Business School graduate Tim Draper. Media critic Douglas Rushkoff was one of the first to write about online viral marketing in his in his 1994 book Media Virus: Hidden Agendas in Popular Culture. The term was used by Jeffrey Rayport when he wrote his December 1996 Fast Company article The Virus of Marketing. The name Viral Marketing was probably first used by venture capitalist Steve Jurvetson in 1997 while describing Hotmail's (he was the venture capitalist behind Hotmail, before it was sold to MSN) email practice of attaching their own advertisements with outgoing mail from their users
In densely knit groups, most members know each other, are in frequent contact with each other, but they have little contact with outsiders. On the other hand, in ramified networks few members are in contact with each other and a large portion of interactions are with outsiders. Viral marketing messages can be spread across a
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small group of people, in which members are closely bounded, or several groups of people which maintain weak ties.
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There are basically two types of viral marketing which are followed in different situations keeping the product or service in mind. 1. Active viral marketing Active viral marketing is more direct and typically, more successful. With active viral marketing, you not only suggest that users perform a certain action, but you empower them to do it. If you want them to tell a friend, you give them a simple tell friends button on your site. If you want them to bookmark a particular product or page on your site, you add easy social bookmarking buttons to make the process more convenient. It is called active viral marketing because the advertisement which you have seen has a promote button and when you press that the advertisement shows to the recipient that you have promoted a particular topic where the person will show interest to see it. 2.
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Start-up companies see viral marketing as the opportunity to get the most coverage with the least amount of capital. Initiating a viral marketing campaign requires insight into the mechanics of viral marketing and well planned strategies. In order for a marketing concept to be viral it must fulfill certain criteria. Foremost, it must be initiated by the customer on his own free will. The idea is not to have a customer do the advertising against payment and more than that, to do something which he would normally not do. Viral marketing was the Internet buzz word in the year 1998. It is the most frequently used marketing concept in the Internet. A mouse click sends a message world-wide, but there is also a negative side to it. It is practically uncontrollable and an unhappy customer will pass along negative propaganda more quickly than positive. In general, viral marketing strategies can be divided into two groups depending on the degree of involvement of the customer in the marketing process. Low Integration Strategy In this strategy the customer is involved only minimally. The e-mail is used to spread the mouth-to-mouth propaganda to a probable user with a mouse click. An example for this type of recommendation is the send a friend button on news articles. Hotmail uses a similar strategy. At the bottom of every sent e-mail is the invitation Get your free e-mail at Hotmail. The user acts as advertiser every time he sends an email. This strategy is also referred to as frictionless viral marketing.
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Viral marketing used to rely heavily on email but it has grown substantially in recent years to take in many other forms and strategies. A successful viral marketing campaign can be created in many different ways including:
E-mail
The most traditional and simple method of viral marketing was email and it is still a viable method today. There can be restrictions on email and filters can sometimes get the low reputation, but the results can still be outstanding often resulting in viral emails being sent all over the world with little being done by a company.
Blogging
Possibly the most powerful of all methods in recent years, blogging allows website visitors to interact with the marketers site and with other bloggers. So cross promoting is easy and effective. Blogging also allows easy customer feedback through comments, leading to increased word of mouth sales.
Chat rooms
Having a chat room on site means customers can chat to each other and hopefully recommend products. One can conduct tele-seminars which can attract prospective buyers. Chat rooms are a great way to build up a relationship with customers and something they can tell their friends about and spread the word about site.
Video clips
Posting videos on sites like YouTube or even on product site can get the viral machine pumping. People love video as they can digest information easier. If a good video is created, it is likely that people will pass this on to others interested in the same topic.
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Flash games get passed around through email and if the marketer can include a small unobtrusive message in the game about the product or service, it can literally get thousands of visitors the flash games can be submitted to big game sites or social sites like Face book where they can be accessed by millions of people.
Buzz marketing
Buzz marketing is creating a 'buzz' about a particular subject, video, website or writing. Buzz marketing is a viral marketing technique that attempts to make each encounter with a consumer appear to be a unique, spontaneous personal exchange of information instead of a calculated marketing pitch choreographed by a professional advertiser. Viral marketing has so many possible methods and implementations that it is impossible to ever run out of ideas. By combining several methods together, marketing campaign is sure to bring results.
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A message which encourages the user to send the message to others is passing along massages. The crudest form of this is chain letters where a message at the bottom of the e-mail prompts the reader to forward the message. More effective are short, funny clips of video which people spontaneously forward
Incentivized viral:
Offering rewards for providing someone's email address or by sending that particular message. However, this is most effective when the offer requires another person to take action. This is mostly in the games where contests offer more chances of winning for each referral given, but when the referral must also participate in order for the first person to obtain that extra chance of winning, the chance that the referral participates is much greater.
Product
Products to be distributed over the Internet fall into specific categories. Goods not suitable for e-commerce are cars, houses, office machines and furniture which need to be personally inspected. Food is also not sold over the Internet. Certain products are better suited for viral marketing than others such as books, CDs, trips from travel agencies and computer products. Computer software is usually selfexplanatory and can be easily downloaded
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Price
To catch the attention of customers viral marketing programs give away products or services. Customers react positively if a product is less expensive or on an item is on sale, however, free attracts eyeballs. The Internet marketers catch the eyeballs of possible customers by offering a product free of charge. This strategy of giving something away is described as Follow the Free-Pricing. There are two steps involved in this first step free software can be downloaded which in turn encourages the customer to pass the news on to others and the second step involves generating revenue with complementary service such as updates or premium products.
Place
Viral marketing takes place in the Internet and the place where contacts and trade take place is the virtual marketplace. The electronic marketplace is an open marketplace where anybody and everybody has access to it and can take part in it. Transaction costs are none or minimal which makes the virtual market place an attractive place for supplier and demander
Promotion
In viral marketing the customer plays a leading role in promoting a product or service and at the same time winning new customers for the product or service. The promoting is done by offering something the user finds useful such as software for communication in viral marketing the customer takes over the role of the middle man and is at the same time also the distributor of the product
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COST EFFICIENT EASY AVAILAIBIL ITY OF RESOURCES ADVANTAGE S OF VIRAL MARKETING FASTER MODE OF ADVERTISI NG WIDE SPREAD REACH MASS CUSTOMISATI ON CATERS TO EXACT TARGET MARKET
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Issue of SPAMS- Viral marketing uses means such as emails and commenting on blogs and forums. When the viral marketing in done in a large scale it becomes annoying for the email receiver to receive large amount of emails in their inbox and they are made filtered as spam messages. Viral marketing talks about only spreading the message to potential consumers through online means but spreading the message is not does not benefit the firm. Sale has occurred at the end for the firm to benefit but the amount of actual sales made apart from promotions is questionable under viral marketing. Results directly attributable to viral marketing is unquantifiable as companies use other marketing techniques and purchase motivation of the consumer depends on the consumer black box, not based on viral marketing. It very hard to make the people to spread the message by emails and other means as people are more concentrated about their personal work rather than doing marketing for business organizations. Continuous effort in viral marketing can cause the product message reaching out of target audience which will result in brand dilution by sales occurring at non-targeted users. Viral marketing focuses more on short term success rather than building differentiation to gain long term advantages. It can be easily imitated by competitors as anyone on internet can launch marketing campaigns easily. Negative publicity is possible at the same speed of positive publicity or even higher speed than that. There is no control as to whom the viral message is sent. Communicators can modify the message during the process of transmission. This manipulation influences the perception of company brand identity by the receivers of the sent message. Customer recommendation is the key to viral spreading and usually reflects the degree of customer satisfaction
BRAND DILUTION Association with unknown groups DISADVANTAGES OF VIRAL MARKETING MANIPULAT ION OF MESSAGE LOSS OF CONTROL SPAM THREAT
HATE SITES
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6. The primary focus of the user is directed to the site where the product or service is solely available. 7. The first carrier or carriers of the virus need to be carefully selected. 8. Care must be taken to concentrate on the target group and avoid being posted on undesirable Websites Not all of the above mentioned elements are necessary to make a viral marketing campaign successful. However, the probability of a successful campaign increases when more of the elements are fulfilled.
The findings of this study are supported by other researches. Dobele, Toleman and Beverland (2005) and Ferguson (2008) analyzed, through case study research of some of the most successful viral marketing campaigns, the consumers responses to 21
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viral marketing stimuli in terms of brand awareness and attitudes and motivations regarding the brand. Ferguson (2008) explored consumers responses to eight real life campaigns of wellknown multinational companies such as Lego, Dell, Burger King, Dunkin Donuts and Procter and Gamble. He interviewed the marketing directors of these companies and the head managers of the online advertising agencies which conducted the viral marketing campaigns. The conclusions of this study are as follows:
Viral marketing strategies are extremely useful to build brand awareness (e.g.: Burger Kings subservient Chicken was seen by 20 million people). Viral marketing campaigns encourage word of mouth which, consequently, leads to trial and acquisition. Viral marketing strategies can be used to build effectively consumer loyalty. Viral marketing campaigns may be used to promote loyalty programs.
Dobele and her colleagues (2005) analyzed seven viral marketing campaigns released by international companies as Honda, Pepsi, Sony and Procter and Gamble. They attempted to identify the strategies behind the success of these campaigns and their effects on consumer behavior. These researchers concluded that viral marketing campaigns have a significant influence in changing the consumers brand image and positioning and increasing trial. They explained this influence by the voluntary nature of forwarding messages which is perceived favorably by the receivers and, consequently, it leads to positive attitudes towards the brand.
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Digital technology leader, SAMSUNG unveiled an online marketing campaign for the promotion of its trendy lifestyle focused NOTE PC'S.VIRAL MARKETING PROGRAM was the key concept that worked wonders for Samsung by creating cross connections between the online community. The objective of the campaign was to multiply the brand interactions by making users participate in the online contestant making users refer the contest to their friends. Mass portals like MSN, YAHOO and REDIFF were used in the online promotion using innovative banners taking users to a demo test and contest. The participant had To answer simple questions in order to win a Samsung Note-PC.It turned out to be a grand success with over 50000participants taking part in the contest enthusiastically. BRAND: Samsung CAMPAIGN: Online marketing campaigns to promote 'X' series of Note PC's MEDIUM: Internet TARGET AUDIENCE: Internet Users between the age group of 25-45 CAMPAIGN OBJECTIVE: To promote the Samsung Note PC's by running the viral marketing program along with the online contest. The focus was not only for the generation of sales enquiries but also reaching potential customer through the online campaign CAMPAIGN PERIOD: Ongoing campaign launched on April 11 CAMPAIGN IDEATION: The campaign used the viral marketing concept for the promotion of Samsung Note PC's by referring the micro site to three friends who could further refer it to their three friends, thus creating a mesh of networks. The campaign also used creative across portals to engage the net-savvy audience in the contest to win a Samsung Note PC, by giving answers to some simple questions CAMPAIGN EXECUTION: The online marketing campaign used DHTML banners across mass portals to unfold the micro site to the users. Along with the banner ads, Rediffs e-mail signatures also carried Samsung banner's to take the audience through a demo test and the contest. A unique brand gallery was created which included interactive demos, features and product info. CAMPAIGN PERFORMANCE:Total visitors to demon: 1.42 laky Total no of friends referred: 76% Total visitors referred who came back to play: 42% Total interactivity-1.25 Mn 23 Total unique reach:5 Mn
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The engaging creatives generated an appeal for the lifestyle-focused product from Samsung, with over 50,000 users taking part in a contest and then referring to one or more of their friends. The campaign execution highlights were: To highlight the thin and light feature of Samsung Note PC's the product was creatively shown as if its floating in the air on the banner ads Sections like WHY SAMSUNG" and "WHY THIN AND LIGHT" provided brand information and product benefit Some of the differentiating features of the product like Super Bright Screen TFT Display, The fingerprint recognizing software and Instant AVS were communicated interactively ADVERTISER'S VIEW As per Ramanjeet Singh, Country Product Manager, Note PC, Samsung India, The campaign's objective was to launch the new series of Samsung Note PC's and involve users with the product imagery and features purely in terms of reaching to our customers and brand interactions we were able to reach out to far large number of audience due to the Word of Mouth Marketing and the excitement that was created among complete campaign"
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50,000 hand raisers who have seen the product in person or on a video who said that they want to know more about it when it comes out and 97% of those dont currently drive a Ford vehicle 38% awareness by Gen Y about the product, without spending a dollar on traditional advertising (Fords model Fusion doesnt have that awareness after 2 years of being out in production and yet it has received hundreds of millions of dollars in traditional marketing spend).
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The Program -To be elected as President using the web and social media channels The Numbers Over 3 million individual donors were mobilized through social media Motivated over 2 million social networking participants Created and promoted more than 200,000 offline events across the country Total of 6.5 million donations online $500 million in donations online More than 13 million people provided their email addresses to the campaign website over the course of the campaign, aides sent more than 7,000 types of messages In total, more than 2 billion e-mails landed in inboxes The campaign website helped create over 2 million user profiles There were over 400,000 blog entries People spent more than 14 million hours watching over 1,000 Obama campaignrelated videos on YouTube There were more than 50 million views of Obama Campaign YouTube Videos 1.2 billion minutes of YouTube view time.
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The viral marketing concept has repeatedly proven itself as the key to many successful businesses. The opportunities for e-commerce are enormous and very appealing to companies starting up in business. Not all viral marketing strategies are applicable to every viral marketing campaign. The type of product to be marketed influences the manner in which the tools are implemented, it does not, however, change the ultimate goal, namely to reach the critical mass. Marketers need to recognize that customers are an additional sales channel, a lead-generating channel, and an awareness-generating channel. Viral marketing is a powerful way to enlist customers in a marketing strategy, and when applied correctly, can boost sales for the right product into the stratosphere and speed the transition from the stage of early adoption to widespread use. The question businesses must pose is not whether to engage in e-commerce, but how best to use the digital technology for marketing purposes. There is a future in e-commerce. Internet marketing has not nearly been exploited to its fullest potential and competition to gain consumers attention will become more difficult and challenging. The balance of power in marketing has shifted to the consumer who can access the Internet at any time of day or night and all year round. The customer is no longer the passive receiver of advertisements. Push mediums such as banner ads, pop-up messages and SPAM are not consciously registered by the consumer. Internet security software allows the user to block unsolicited messages. Businesses will have to adjust their marketing strategies to the new environment. It is up to business to use viral marketing strategies to raise brand awareness and develop customer relationships .obviously; many unanswered questions exist regarding viral marketing. It is a grave misconception to think that viral marketing is the key to quick riches. Viral marketing looks easy but the contrary is true. There are always exceptions to the rule such as the free e-mail provider, but generally, careful planning is a prerequisite. Product analysis, market research and marketing strategies have to be considered before initiating a viral marketing campaign. There is a misconception that viral marketing is easy. The key to an effective viral spreading is motivation; however, the doses of motivation must be carefully calculated. Too much can create chaos and dishonesty while too little motivation will not impress anybody. The product itself must arouse the interest and stimulate the desire to pass it on .It is an effective tool when peoples desire to communicate can be used to pass on information in the Internet. They actively participate in the verbal (e-mail) exchange of experiences and impressions. The Web provides the perfect medium for such an exchange and can have an unprecedented snowball effect as can be seen with Hotmail .Having Internet customers spread information more or less free of charge, is the ultimate goal of viral marketing. The advertiser thus uses third parties to carry his message either through viral marketing, affiliate programs or marketing programs. Viral marketing has the opportunity to reach thousands of potential customers at minimal expenditure. The instruments or tools for spreading viral marketing campaigns in the Internet are the people who visit the Web. Their desire
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to communicate with others is an asset for marketers, the message spreads exponentially but only if the service or product contains certain qualities The following characteristics are true of all successful viral marketing campaigns:
Understand the target audience craft and test the message, and target influential in the relevant communities to implement the campaign. Motivate people to pass along the marketing message, but not so much that encourages spamming. Make it easy for people to participate in the marketing campaign. Let people know their e-mail address or personal information will not be used without their permission. Offer a product or service that is worthy of conversation. Have on-line and off-line components in the viral marketing campaign. Make sure the campaign is integrated with the larger marketing strategy and not a one-time incident. Track and analyze the results of the campaign. Don't "rely on incentivizing in the long-term, but build customer loyalty through good value, excellent service, entertainment, or an emotional attachment."
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II.
Ferguson, R., 2008. Word of mouth and viral marketing: taking the temperature of the hottest trends in marketing. Journal of Consumer Marketing. 25(3), pp. 179-182
III.
Jurvetson, S., and Draper, T., 1997. Viral Marketing. [Online] Available from: http://www.dfj.com/news/article_26.shtml (accessed on 19 DEC 2011)
IV.
http://www.witiger.com/ecommerce/viralmarketing.htm
V.
Jurvetson, S., 2000. From the ground floor: What exactly is viral marketing? Red Herring Communications. May, pp. 110-111
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