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War of The Worlds: Lessons From The Original Mass Media Marketing Virus

The Chronicle Review is running a fascinating deconstruction of the infamous 1938 broadcast of Orson Welles’s War of The Worlds radio broadcast that should be required reading for anyone interested in word of mouth or viral marketing. The widely reported hysteria was pretty tame in reality, but it was spun into something greater by a self-important media in love with a story about the power it possessed.

So what accounts for the legend? First — and perhaps most important — the news media loved the story, and Welles loved the news media. The panic became a global story literally overnight. Even the Nazis could not resist commenting, noting the credulity of the American public. Americans certainly appeared gullible, but they were not alone. The news media, handed a sensational story of national scope, reported every detail (including fictional ones) about Welles, the program, and the reaction.

Welles’s greatest performance that evening wasn’t in the studio; it was in a hallway, at the improvised news conference, when he feigned a stunned, apologetic demeanor. In reality, as Paul Heyer notes in The Medium and the Magician, Welles carefully concealed his satisfaction with the hysteria while expressing concern over the rumors of deaths attributed to the program.

The only firsthand study of the event with any scientific credibility actually disproved then-present-day perceptions of mass-media’s role in human psyche as some sort of great controller… It showed that people are not easily manipulated, at least not with predictable results.

The hypodermic model of media effects, which prevailed at the time, posited that the media injected ideas, more or less directly, into the consciousness of the audience. The book’s data seriously undermined that model, demonstrating empirically that each member of the mass audience filters the media’s messages through a matrix of personal variables (education, critical ability, class, etc.). Those data complicated media theory tremendously and intensified the research focus on the complexities of audience reception.

Lazarsfeld surprised many by concluding in The People’s Choice, his classic study of the 1940 election, that the media’s effects are, in general, much more selective and limited than we assume. Other forms of communication, from those in the education system to religious communication to interpersonal communication, were apparently more powerful. The mass media were but one part of a larger web of influence, and as one factor, their actual influence was mediated by several other variables. Thus, the media’s ability to control us was far less pronounced than assumed.

That is the ultimate irony behind “The War of the Worlds.” The discovery that the media are not all-powerful, that they cannot dominate our political consciousness or even our consumer behavior as much as we suppose, was an important one. It may seem like a counter intuitive discovery (especially considering its provenance), but ask yourself this: If we really know how to control people through the media, then why isn’t every advertising campaign a success? Why do advertisements sometimes backfire? If persuasive technique can be scientifically devised, then why do political campaigns pursue different strategies? Why does the candidate with the most media access sometimes lose?

The answer is that humans are not automatons. We might scare easily, we might, at different times and in different places, be susceptible to persuasion, but our behavior remains structured by a complex and dynamic series of interacting factors.

Something to keep in mind next time you have big plans for your market.

The Hyped Panic Over ‘War of the Worlds’ – The Chronicle Review.

[Illustration by Doug Savage]

Wario Marketing Campaign Breaks YouTube

Nintendo’s new game, Wario Land: Shake It, has a marketing campaign that takes the YouTube experience to a new (broken) level. Wario Land: Shake It – Amazing footage! You have to see it to believe it. In fact, you may have to see it twice…

Electronics Arts Brilliantly Responds to Fan Via YouTube

More YouTube drama-goodness today:

In August last summer, a fan of Electronic ArtsTiger Woods PGA Tour ’08 posted a video showing a glitch in the game that allows Tiger Woods to literally walk on water and perform a golf shot. He referred to it as the Jesus glitch.

Well, someone at EA saw it (after 100,000+ views) and responded with the following vid a few days ago:

These kinds of marketing opportunities wouldn’t exist without mainstream sites based on user generated content, like YouTube. It’s nice to see a company mastering the medium and using it to communicate directly with their fans on a level otherwise not possible. This is as opposed to, say, freaking out and unleashing the attack dog lawyers, because you don’t understand your product, your audience and their culture.

Nicely played, EA. (Tiger, too.)

"Girlfriend" Video Tops YouTube With Viral Viral Marketing (not a typo)

Bear with me here, this gets a bit complicated…

For years, the #1 YouTube video had been Jud Laipply’s The Evolution of Dance. It’s funny, pretty timeless as far internet phenomena go, and has a universal appeal. It also had about 92 million views as of this writing.

Multi-platinum Canadian pop-tart Avril Lavigne has just dethroned The Evolution of Dance with the music video to her single, “Girlfriend.” This is not all that surprising. “Girlfriend” has a hook approaching ABBA levels of catchy, the video is humorous, and Avril is a Hot-Topic-esque punk-but-pretty girl in a short skirt prancing about suggestively. (For what it’s worth, she’s risen far enough that Hot-Topic is now aping her style, not the other way around.)

This is YouTube fodder, if I’ve ever seen it, but that’s self defeating because “Girlfriend” is exactly that: fodder. How did this middling-concoction get 97,000,000+ views in the last two months? Is it really that clever? Is there ground being broken? Is it, in and of itself, phenomena? No, no, and no.

The video for “Girlfriend” is catchy, sexy and funny. (Edgy, too: she drops the f-bomb, but they’ve edited it out.) However, it’s still the same hook-and-beat ear candy that Gwen, Britney, Madonna and The Cast from High School Musical have been churning out for years. Enjoyable, but without staying power. So, whither all the views? Well, as you’ve no doubt surmised, there’s a lot more to this than meets the eye…

On June 19th, the Avril Lavigne fansite Avril Bandaids launched a “Girlfriend” YouTube Viewer (It’s now been retired) with the intention of making “Girlfriend” the #1 YouTube video of all time. The url that hosted the viewer reloaded the video every 15 seconds. The theory was that Avril fans could load up that url, let it run, and Avril would get the top video spot in no time.

Well, Entertainment Tonight, Perez Hilton, Wired.com, The Globe and Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, and many others picked up the story and started crying “foul.” How dare this hardcore group choose the number one YouTube video for us!? How dare they! And that’s where this story gets good.

There was no foul. YouTube caps it’s views per specific IP at 200 per day. (That may sound like a lot, but it’s not enough for a small legion of hardcore fans to make a dent in a number approacing 100,000,000.) There was no way they could game YouTube in the way they were purporting; and they knew it all along.

This is an excerpt from a letter addressed “Dear Media” that was posted on the Avril Bandaids forum. It’s titled The Two Steps I’ll Always Be Ahead Of You.

…But like a magician revealing the M.O. to a convincing trick, I have to admit that Bandaids’ YouTube Campaign was nothing but misdirection. Bandaiders didn’t cheat: the YouTube Viewer was a Hoax.

All along, I knew that YouTube capped the number of views added to a video at 200 per IP address per day. As such, the only way to make Girlfriend the most watched video on YouTube the fast way was to increase our reach, not our views per person. And the best way to do that was to use viral marketing to tap into traditional news sources. So our members went about inflating the count on the YouTube Viewer and spreading the link around the net.

In the mean time, the real end game of the campaign was unfolding nicely. As media outlets around the world began accusing Bandaids of cheating Avril’s way into the record books, they drove thousands upon thousands of curious folks to watch Avril Lavigne’s Girlfriend video on YouTube (yes, even you Perez). This resulted in a much larger boost to Avril’s view count than Bandaids could ever have generated on its own.

Don’t believe me? When the Viewer launched on June 19th, Girlfriend had amassed 88.0 million views on its own merits. On June 24th when the viewer was retired, Girlfriend had 88.9 million views – an increase largely on pace with what Girlfriend had been steadily gaining in the past few months. At best, Bandaids’ YouTube Viewer added under 100,000 (legitimate, as per YouTube’s terms of service) views to Girlfriend’s total view count. The only thing we cheated was hundreds of reporters into doing our promo for us…

Your Friendly Neighbourhood Avril Lavigne Fansite Owner,

Sharifa xx

It was a genius gaming of the system. The foul-criers were perpetrators of that which they were condemning. Whether you like the song or the artist, you’ve got to admire the execution. Now that is viral marketing.

Oh, and this is not to mention the fact that now “Girlfriend” is being covered by bloggers like me, as well. Getting them a third dip out of the campaign from people who otherwise never would have seen the video. So, go over there and watch “Girlfriend.” You know you want to, and it’s not bad, it really isn’t. But then go watch The Evolution of Dance, as long as you’re there. You won’t be dissapointed. It was, after all, number one for a reason.

3 Quick Ways to Retain More RSS Subscribers

1) Title Your RSS Feed With Scanning in Mind. Your subscriber is most likely going to stick your RSS feed into a list. It’s going to be left-justified for easy scanning. You want your title to be easy to read, aka don’t screw up the flow of an eye flying down the list trying to make sense of each line or they’ll move on. This most likely means using title capitalization and keeping it short and sweet. Get rid of the extra words. You don’t want an ellipses at the end of your title where it got cut off by their RSS app. That’s presenting your reader with a problem with no solution: they’ll move on.

2) Hook-Title Your Articles. You should be doing this anyway, but it’s especially important for RSS feeds. Sometimes a reader may only have the headline of your article to go off of. This is much more likely in an RSS subscription scenario. The title should always make them want to read more. Too many bloggers like to use cutesy-inside-joke headlines. This is bad for your RSS readers. Be clever for the body of the post. Be clear for the headlines. Here’s 8 killer headline formulas that work. (via Copyblogger)

  1. Who Else Wants [blank]?
  2. The Secret of [blank]
  3. Little Known Ways to [blank]
  4. Get Rid of [problem] Once and For All
  5. Here’s a Quick Way to [solve a problem]
  6. Now You Can Have [something desirable] [great circumstance]
  7. [Do something] like [world-class example]
  8. What Everybody Ought to Know About [blank]

3) Subscribe to Your Own RSS Feed (and others). If you don’t want to read your own RSS feed, why should anyone else? You’ve got to use your medium to understand it. This is known as “eating your own dog food” in entrepreneurial circles, and not doing so is considered a mark of death. How many times have you purchased a slickly-marketed product only to find out within about 30 seconds of use that the person selling it obviously never used it? Some manufacturers can get away with this, but not online. Returning your product, and never buying again, is as close as an “unsubscribe” button.

Twitter: Branded by Failure?

Twitter Fail Whale

When Twitter (Web 2.0′s current spotlight darling) goes down, its users see what has become known as The Fail Whale. The Fail Whale has been shown so much, that it’s threatening to take over the Twitter brand, if it already hasn’t. What happens when your users see your cutesy-tongue-in-cheek 404 page more than they see your home page?

So is this good or bad? I’m not sure.

On one hand, it means that your product is so beloved by your users that they chose to hope and long for its return instead of just moving on. Considering the ground that there is to cover for most web surfers, this may be the highest compliment a user can give.

On the other hand, when your brand becomes a part of the zeitgeist as a synonym for failure, it can’t be good. I for one, am hesitant to buy into the service too much lest I come to rely on it and it fails me at an innoportune moment. And what of potential users whose first contact with the service is via Fail Whale? You never get the chance to make that impression again.

They say there’s no such thing as bad publicity, and it brings a tear to any modern marketer’s eye to see user generated community spring up around a brand like Twitter’s Fail Whale lovers have done. But when the first seconds a customer is in contact with your product, the only thing they know is that it doesn’t work a lot of the time, then you’ve got a whale of a problem.

Why Every Nintendo Should Buy Their Wii Fit a Viral Marketing Video

Yesterday, a video was making the rounds called Why every guy should buy their girlfriend Wii Fit. It definitely struck a chord with me (A 27-year-old male, aka the intended audience) as it featured a girl gyrating around and bending over repeatedly in her underwear, courtesy of actually playing Nintendo’s Wii Fit. (Video is mildly NSFW.)

This viral video was uploaded to YouTube 4 days ago and now has 475,776 views. It was dugg 8000+ times on Digg. It’s got 64 up-votes and 123 comments on Reddit.

Why every guy should buy their girlfriend Wii Fit was originally submitted to YouTube by a user named tinsleyadvertising and the two people featured in the video appear to be Tinsley Full Service Advertising employees Giovanny Gutierrez, Director of Interactive Media, and Lauren Bernat, Account Executive. At least it sure looks like it, after doing a quick search for “Giovanny Guiterrez” at Flickr

Now, one of two things is going on here:

  1. Nintendo has paid Tinsley Full Service Advertising for a viral marketing campaign that was worth every penny.
  2. They should have.

In 4 days this video has been viewed almost half-million times by people who use YouTube, Reddit, and/or Digg. Not necessarily all first-adopters at this point, but definitely a tech-savvy crowd. Most definitely made up of people that would buy or own a Nintendo Wii. This was a very nice piece of viral marketing.

Or so I thought until I read the YouTube comment that was submitted with the video: “This is why I love Wii Fit. ‘Nuff said. PS This is a personal video I made… I just work at Tinsley Advertising (not related to Nintendo whatsoever). However I’d love to do work for them :)” This led to an argument about Giovanny’s agenda with my co-worker, Geoff. Maybe, they weren’t paid by Nintendo, maybe they were, maybe they want to be.

Either way, they’ve surely got Nintendo’s attention now. Nice, er, move, Giovanny.

UPDATED 05/30/08: The L.A. Times picked up on the story yesterday afternoon. They contacted Giovanny, who said that it was not a paid viral and that his girlfriend…

“She was FURIOUS,” wrote Gutierrez, who said she “called me on the phone screaming her head off and then hung up on me.”

“But now [she] finds herself actually laughing about it and enjoying her 15 minutes of fame.

LA Times – Wii Fit girl was ‘FURIOUS’ at her boyfriend

Motorcycle Company Gets Viral Marketing Right

BMW K 1200R Movie Still

Theworldsmostpowerfulnakedbike.com

This viral marketing website fires on all cylinders. There’s a plain black background, focusing us on the movie playing in the middle. Various pieces of a high-tech sport bike are visible. An anonymous rider backs out of a race trailer, idles to the line, and does a smoky burnout to get the shoes sticky. Then… SQUEERRRWAAAAAH-and we’re off! Screaming into the distance with a hair-raising engine wail; the camera following along for the ride. After ripping through a few gears comes the money-shot: the rider pops a high-speed wheelie giving us the first glimpse of exactly what motorcycle we’ve been looking at… It’s a BMW K 1200R.

Although it’s done here to great effect, showing some expert push your product to the limit is nothing new in transportation sales. What’s taking this site to the next level is a near-perfect, contagion execution.

Let’s pick it apart…

  1. BMW really takes advantage of the fact that this url gives no hint as to the product’s branding. They don’t show you the familiar blue-and-white crest until well over 30 seconds into the video. By the time you see that it’s a BMW bike, you’re already invested emotionally in the proceedings and at least some part of that investment is transferred onto their brand, whether you like it or not. They are cutting their baggage loose by taking this chance, and it pays off big.
  2. The focus is 100% on the action at hand, there’s no progress slider, there’s no volume button. Just a field of black, their bike footage and you. Normally, sound on a website with no volume/mute button is one of the cardinal sins of web design. They get away with here, though, because it’s not exactly auto-play. You have to click to start the movie. And they give you a warning of the impending audio with a little engine rev before you click. It’s short and sweet enough to not warrant much attention from the guy in the cubicle across the way, but it lets you know tail-pipe music will be forthcoming, should you want to turn down the volume on your computer.
  3. The parting shot is nicely done, as well. They provide you a link to contact local dealers as well as a link to the 1200R product page. Two nicely targeted calls to action are presented without having to reproduce their entire site at this alternate url. They also offer a “replay movie” link along with an available download of the film for the ones who liked it enough that they want to experience it again, and share it with friends. (A.K.A They pay service to, and provide a path of least resistance for, those who are most likely to truly make it a viral site.)

Whoever is doing BMW’s new-media marketing earned every penny on this one. Laser-like focus on the product at hand, maximum capitalization on the distance-from-brand viral campaigns offer, and a classy, understated call to action makes this viral site a winner.