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Category: Viral Marketing

Five Questions for Dave Balter, BzzAgent

Dave Balter, Founder and CEO of BzzAgent, Inc. launched the company in 2002, and since that time, BzzAgent has established itself as the leading provider of word-of-mouth services for the world’s most esteemed brands, including Anheuser-Busch, Levi Strauss and Ralph Lauren. In January of 2006, the company closed a groundbreaking US$14 million round of institutional financing.

Balter is a founding member of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA) and co-authored “Grapevine: The New Art of Word-of-Mouth Marketing.” BzzAgent Inc. is a word-of-mouth marketing and media firm that helps companies to organize and manage honest, real-world conversations among everyday consumers. BzzAgent’s innovative process, platform and programs enable the acceleration and measurement of word-of-mouth as a marketing medium. Using such systems, BzzAgent’s clients can generate awareness and shape perception about their products and services either via BzzAgent’s community of 160,000 trained, volunteer brand evangelists.

One Degree: Do you see a difference between buzz, viral marketing, work of mouth and novelty?

I’m not entirely sure what you define as novelty, so I can’t really speak to that, but the other 3 concepts – buzz, viral and WOM – all belong to the same family of consumer engagement (in the marketing process). The commonality among these practices is the belief that the consumer is in control and will determine what media they want to consume and what they are willing to listen to and communicate about. In other words, what unites these techniques is the marketer’s willingness to allow the consumer to determine the messages to be communicated.

However, there are some key distinctions that can’t be ignored. Buzz marketing is most traditionally an event or experience that’s intended to get people talking. It’s Oprah Winfrey giving away 276 Pontiac G6’s on her show in 2004 or Snapple attempting to build the world’s biggest popsicle in NYC’s Union Square (which melted by the way…which created its own buzz, of course).

Viral marketing is any message that is passed along from one consumer to another. The majority of viral marketing takes place online with video snippets such as Subservient Chicken. In some cases, viral media happens organically, with no marketing push. Stephen Colbert’s recent lampooning of President Bush, for example, quickly became one of the most watched videos on the Internet.

Viral marketing can also take place offline, as it did with Lance Armstrong’s Yellow Bracelets, but the Internet continues to be the medium of choice for most viral marketing programs.

Word-of-mouth is the actual sharing of an honest opinion between two or more consumers. It’s part of our social fabric – it’s a major aspect of how we people communicate with one another. The key concept here is that no marketer can create word-of-mouth. It can be sparked, accelerated, augmented, even measured – but because it occurs naturally, it can’t be manufactured or manipulated.

Buzz marketing and viral marketing programs sometimes attempt to create word-of-mouth, with mixed results based on a variety of factors from current consumer trends to originality of the concept. The big takeaway: word of mouth is what ends up driving real results. When it occurs, the rest is easy!

One Degree: How has BzzAgent changed since it was founded in 2002?

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Using The Internet To Get McFly

Nike McFlys
“Internationally famous sneakerographer” “Al Cabino”:http://operationmcfly.blogspot.com is fighting for your right to wear sneakers inspired by the film “Back to the Future Part II.”:http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096874/ Cabino launched a petition requesting that Nike release a shoe modelled after the grey moon-boots worn by Michael J. Fox in the 1989 movie. Nike originally created the sneakers for the film, but they were never made available to the public, something Cabino is hoping to change.
*One Degree:* “Al, why do you want to own Marty McFly’s sneakers from Back To The Future II and how is the Internet helping you achieve your dream?”
*Al Cabino:* That’s an excellent question.
Everyone dreams of walking in a movie star’s shoes. The McFlys are the Holy Grail of movie sneakers. The McFlys were created just for the film, never worn beyond the silver screen, and I’ve always been fascinated by them. There is a sneaker legend that says that in 2015, Nike will come out with them. But I’m not going to wait 9 years. There are a *lot* of people who don’t want to wait 9 years.

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Making "Get A Mac" Viral

I get the whole “new marketing”:http://www.jaffejuice.com/ thing that “Joseph Jaffe”:http://www.getthejuice.com/ talks about in his “Life After The 30-Second Spot”:http://www.lifeafter30.com/. TV just isn’t what it used to be. But that doesn’t mean that _all_ TV ads are a waste of money.
If you are “Apple”:http://www.apple.com/ and you want to take another shot at convincing people to *Get A Mac* then TV might be the right place to do it.
Tell me the ads in the “Get A Mac”:http://www.apple.com/getamac campaign aren’t brilliant and compelling.

Still, Apple could have done a much better job of making the online part of Get A Mac more viral. Here are *seven things I would have done to make this spread faster:*
# Add them to “YouTube”:http://www.youtube.com and “Google Video”:http://video.google.com/. Who cares where people see the ads. Getting them on these highly viral networks in “official versions” (not the fan-uploaded ones you find now) would be a great step forward.
# Make each video linkable. Right now while there is a unique URL for each video at each resolution these don’t seem to be visible to the user. All the ads regardless of content or size seem to come from the same URL (http://www.apple.com/getamac/ads/?restarting_medium). This makes it hard to naturally link to something or to bookmark favourites.
# Make them easy to download. Yes you can download the .mov files if you know what you are doing, but adding a “download this ad” link wouldn’t hurt.
# Copy YouTube and GoogleVideo and make it *very* easy to share the video online by including a “Share this Ad” to e-mail a link, a “Link to this Ad” with a short URL to get to the specific ad, and an “Add this Ad to your Site” link to an embedded player (like the one I used above from YouTube).
# Create a feed people can subscribe to if they want to get new Apple ads sent directly to them via iTunes or a Feedreader. Apple’s ads are so entertaining that I’m sure many people – even non-Mac users would sign-up for amusement sake.
# Archive older ads so that people can always look back at how far we’ve come.
# Bribe people with “link love” by cribbing YouTube’s pseudo trackback for video plays. Called “links to this video”, the feature shows how many people have clicked through to the page from other sites (with live links to the URLs).

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