Geeky Business

Geeky Business

Marcus Kuhn  //  I'm a 26 year old entrepreneur from Switzerland and co-founder of connex.io. I have an interest in both technology and business and try to connect those two worlds.

Mar 18 / 9:06am

7 observations on Viral Marketing

In my last post "Creating a Viral Marketing Campaign" I wrote about the viral marketing campaign I had launched together with a group of other students. I promised to keep you updated and am now doing so.

Our project to create a viral video faced many problems and we struggled quite a bit to get it going. To be successful we had to be able to get the video an initial push that would be strong enough for it to become viral. This process of "going viral" can be boiled down to a simple equation, the share ratio: How many people one person who has seen the video in average causes to watch the video. If the ratio is below one your campaign is dying. Conversely if the ratio is above the magical number it is going viral and the higher the share ratio the faster it spreads.

Being a class project we had a fixed deadline and unfortunately we did not achieve our goals by that set time. But we did manage to cross the line about two weeks later. We had set the goal to reach at least 10,000 people and that one major newspaper in Singapore would report about our campaign, today our main video has been watched more than 13,000 times, and the Straits Times, Singapore's largest newspaper, wrote about our campaign.

The experiment resulted in seven observations on Viral Marketing which I want to share with you:

1. Fail to Plan; Plan to Fail

Meticulous planning will help your campaign to succeed. Once the plan is nailed down it will change quite frequently while you have to adapt to reality and what is happening with your campaign. But if there is no plan you cannot adapt it and will be lost. Failure to plan therefore is a plan to failure.

2. Social Networks Are Amazingly Powerful

With our campaign we fostered the power of Facebook and it became clear very early on that Facebook is amazingly powerful in sharing a message and promoting a cause. But in strong-tie networks such as Facebook with their closed nature it is difficult to reach people beyond your own circle of friends.

3. Build a Network of Weakly Tied Influencers

To successfully promote a campaign beyond the circle of your strongly tied friends you need to build a network of weakly tied influencers. You need to find people you share a common ground with, that is, people interested in the cause you are trying to promote, and convince them to help you in spreading your message. Only this way will you be able to escape the entanglement of your own social graph.

4. The Ingredients Matter More Than One Thinks

Most viral videos and viral campaigns in general have not gone viral because someone wanted them to, but because the material astonished people. Analyzing Susan Boyle’s “I dreamed a dream” or “The Battle at Kruger”, two of the most successful videos ever on YouTube, it becomes obvious that those videos touch people, they amaze people. This made those videos as successful as they are. But: This does not mean it is impossible to artificially create a viral campaign. It does however mean that the material must be either very creative or genuinely attention-grabbing.

5. Offline Can Help To Drive Online Traffic

To combine an online viral marketing campaign with an offline campaign that relates to people in real life can be a very powerful tool, especially to kick start a campaign. An offline campaign not only drives traffic but also might generate interest among multiplicators such as the press or bloggers.

6. Do Not Ask What People Can Do For Your Campaign

Ask what your campaign can do for the people instead. People in general are egoists and need an incentive to become active on their own. If your video is not astonishingly good, and most videos, especially produced ones, won’t be, additional motivators such as a prize are needed. Such an incentive will cause people to help the campaign while helping themselves. You use people's behavior to promote your campaign.

7. Money Helps

Money can facilitate the process of getting a video viral. A professionally produced video, a highly optimized website, buying ads on websites dealing with the topic, or an offline advertising campaign are some of the things that money can buy and definitely make it easier to spread your message.

Thanks to Jenny Costelloe, Noah Gunzinger, Rajeev Batra, and Sunil Tulsiani for making this post possible.

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Jun 18 / 6:50am

Good presentations are hard to create

It is very difficult to create a good slide show (in PowerPoint or any other program). And it is even more difficult to present the slide show in a way that communicates your points as good as possible, is interesting and is engaging. In this post I want to share some of the sources that have inspired me to create better presentations and present them more convincing and engaging.

Death by PowerPoint

Quite a few of the people reading this blog might have already seen the presentation "Death by PowerPoint" (embedded below) which outlines a few "guidelines" which help you to create great presentations. The hints given span from the trivial and obvious ("don't use clip art") to the more surprising and sometimes questionable ("don't follow those standard rules about how many points there should be on a slide"). Mainly the author makes a point by showing in an exemplary way how it should and shouldn't be done.
Some of the points made in the presentation:
  • Be significant, find the meaning behind your presentation, significance creates passion which attracts attention which leads to action
  • Have a convincing, memorable and scalable structure.
  • Scalability helps you to adapt to unforeseen situations, you can talk 5, 15 or 45 minutes about your topic.
  • Simplicity: "Everything should be made as simple as possible but no simpler"
  • Only use three to four strong arguments to make each point. Save the rest for the handout / the discussion
  • Not everything needs to be on a slide, the handout can be in a different format and have extended content
  • Use one simple point per slide, don't limit the slide count, limit the number of points you make
  • Use only few matching colors, few fonts and high quality pictures.
  • Rehearse! Get feedback, improve your presentation and your presenting
All in all it can be said that the authors point is: "Great presentations are hard work!" Beyond making these points I also find the presentation very beautiful and an example how it should be done, have a look at it.

The TED commandments
Another resource that I have found just recently (via Tim Longhurst) are the TED commandments. TED is an annual conference that defines its mission as "ideas worth spreading. And a lot of the presentations held there are just plain amazing. Why? One of the reasons might be the aforementioned TED commandments:
  1. Thou Shalt Not Simply Trot Out thy Usual Shtick
  2. Thou Shalt Dream a Great Dream, or Show Forth a Wondrous New Thing, Or Share Something Thou Hast Never Shared Before
  3. Thou Shalt Reveal thy Curiosity and Thy Passion
  4. Thou Shalt Tell a Story
  5. Thou Shalt Freely Comment on the Utterances of Other Speakers for the Skae of Blessed Connection and Exquisite Controversy
  6. Thou Shalt Not Flaunt thine Ego. Be Thou Vulnerable. Speak of thy Failure as well as thy Success.
  7. Thou Shalt Not Sell from the Stage: Neither thy Company, thy Goods, thy Writings, nor thy Desparate need for Funding; Lest Thou be Cast Aside into Outer Darkness.
  8. Thou Shalt Remember all the while: Laughter is Good.
  9. Thou Shalt Not Read thy Speech.
  10. Thou Shalt Not Steal the Time of Them that Follow Thee
Those commandments are delivered to future speakers printed on a rock... And I'm convinced they leave a lasting impression. Amy Tan described the arrival in her talk as “something that creates a near-death experience; but near-death is good for creativity…”. Of course I don't want to withhold a picture of the commandments (via Rives):

Inspiration

Some of the best talks / presentations I have seen so far have been held at a TED conference and as far as I know, almost all of the talks held at a TED conference are put online. But I don't want to tell you just about an inspiring video site but about some talks and presentations that have inspired me personally . Of course worth mentioning here are keynotes held by Steve Jobs (e.g. presenting the iPhone) and Al Gores "An inconvienient Truth" (TrailerAl Gore: From "showing slides" to winning an Oscar by Presentation Zen;Lessons from "An Inconvenient Truth" by Dava Paradi). But most of you will know these, so here two other samples I have selected:

Hans Rosling is a master at presenting and has held more than one talk that would be worth mentioning here. I just wanted to show you this one where he makes statistics interesting.

Another presentation that inspired me was Randy Pauschs Last Lecture ("Really achieving your Childhood dreams"). Very simple slides, but  not simplistic by any measure. The presentation is convincing, meaningful and most definitely significant.
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