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Question: How often do companies successfully engineer word-of-mouth marketing?
Answer: The phrasing, "engineer word-of-mouth" is very
interesting. Inasmuch as it suggests "force" or "manipulate," I'd say
that no company has ever successfully engineered word of mouth.
However, for those companies that guide or inspire word of mouth by
empowering consumers, respecting their opinions, thanking them for
sharing their input, and making changes based on consumer counsel ...
in those cases, word of mouth marketing is successful all the time,
every day.
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Question: Can a large company do it—or is word-of-mouth marketing only for small companies?
Answer: Word of mouth happens for companies of all sizes. The
iPod and the iPhone were massive word-of-mouth phenomena. So was the
Swiffer. Smaller companies, like Webkinz, may need to rely on word of
mouth more due to smaller marketing budgets, but the impact is equally
valuable.
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Question: What are the components of an effective word-of-mouth marketing program?
Answer: The most important thing is that companies tap into
consumer advocacy without destroying what makes it so powerful: trust.
Effective programs should ensure participants are:
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Unpaid. Cash messes with our opinions!
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Unscripted. People should say what they really feel, no matter how good or how bad
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Open. If someone is involved in an organized word of mouth program, the people they talk to should be aware of that.
A simple test is to ask yourself: would I feel ok if my eighty-year
old grandma knew about this program? That will help guide you.
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Question: What is the difference between viral and word-of-mouth marketing?
Answer: Viral marketing is typically reserved for programs
where the advertising is talked about as opposed to the product itself.
A good example are viral videos, where the humor trumps the brand, ala
Cadbury Schweppes drumming gorilla video—humorous partly due to the
Phil Collins soundtrack, of course—and the parodies which followed).
Word of mouth is the actual sharing of an opinion about a product or
service between consumers. Your viral marketing only works if it gets
people talking about the product itself. If it doesn’t, you might
create some laughter and awareness, but there won’t be a change in
sales.
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Question: How long does an episode of word-of-mouth communication last?
Answer: At this stage BzzAgents have generated north of 100
million conversations. From the data we’ve collected, each conversation
lasts more than six minutes. But this isn’t like traditional
marketing—it’s not a one way advertisement. Typically word of mouth
dialogues includes discussions about other competitive products,
personal experiences, pros and cons. It’s all of the things that help
us really understand a product’s value.
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Question: What does a person do after purchasing a product—using word-of-mouth juice?
Answer: “Word-of-mouth juice”— do you mind if I borrow that
term for the title of my next book? To answer your question, this
“juice” is what made the iPhone so amazingly successful. People felt
obligated to show someone else. Partly out of excitement, but also to
be ‘validated’ for making the decision to wait in line, plunk down the
cash, and take the leap to get one. We call this the “pass along
effect.” Shortly after purchase, many people generate the most word of
mouth about a product—often to see how others react and to make
ourselves feel good about the purchase.
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Question: What is the best way to reward—indeed, if you should reward—people who do word-of-mouth marketing for a company?
Answer: The best reward is a sincere "thank you." Companies
are always surprised at how much advocacy and word of mouth is
generated when they listen to, acknowledge, and show appreciation to
those consumers who take the time to share their opinions. Products,
samples, prizes ... these things all help, but nothing inspires more
than listening and thanking
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Question: What makes a new product like the iPhone become “urgent”?
Answer: Steve Jobs has figured out a word-of-mouth blueprint
that’s pretty incredible. When they launch a product, information is
scarce and supply is limited. Before anyone even sees one, they’re
talking about how they want to buy it. Of course Apple can pull this
off because it makes great products that blow away expectations. Also,
Apple develops tremendous advertising, which is worth talking about in
itself. Word of mouth doesn’t replace great advertising, it just helps
great advertising perform better.
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Question: How can a company make a sample of its product the most powerful?
Answer: Every company wants to get their product into
people’s hands. Trial is clearly an incredible way to create buyers,
but a tremendous amount of sampling is wasted. Imagine you went to a
ballgame and there were people outside the park handing out little
packs of Tums. The company may give away hundreds of thousands of
trials, but how many of the recipients needed heartburn medicine? How
many of them were thrown out? Most importantly, how does the company
know if people liked them or used them or thought they were a headache
remedy?
So rather than the random shotgun sample approach, companies should
start online by inviting people to request a sample and then giving
them a way to report back their opinion and, most importantly, how they
shared that with others. The result: 100% engagement and data you can
actually use!
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Question: Do you believe in the theory of top-down, elite influencers?
Answer: I believe in Influentials, Trendsetters,
Trendspreaders, Sneezers, Alphas, Bees, Hubs, Mavens. These "special
people" do exist—but companies should be careful on their reliance on
tremendously influential people to help spread their opinions. Often
there’s a mismatch between someone’s enormous network of friends and
their interest in trying a specific product and to share it with
others.
Companies should focus on finding people who really want to be
involved with their product. They should focus on helping these
individuals learn about what makes their product unique and special to
share with their networks. However, it all starts with a great product.
Few will care if a product doesn’t meet expectations.
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Question: What exactly does your company do?
Answer: BzzAgent
is a word-of-mouth media company. We have nearly 450,000 volunteers who
learn about products and services through our network and share them
with their friends in an open, natural way. We do our best to provide
something for everyone. For example, people who dig websites and other
digital initiatives can hang out in our Frogpond to find out about
what’s cool. Do you like tasty food or cool cleaning products? Sign up
for our network and you may get into a campaign for Back to Nature Nuts
or a new plug-in air freshener, and we’ll send you out some samples to
try, and then you share your opinion however you’d like! [You can see
how bzzagents review websites here
.]
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Question: What’s your assessment of Alltop’s word-of-mouth potential?
Answer: When I first saw Alltop
[please come back later if the site is slow or down because it's
getting crushed by traffic], I was blown away by the simplicity and
usefulness of the site. The web is getting harder and harder to
navigate and a place you can go to find the best of the best just makes
life easier. A few things that make it work so well:
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Alltop is worth talking about (it’s made it so easy for me to find great food sites!).
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The sites that get listed want to tell their own networks, so it’s naturally viral.
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The semi-transparent navigation bar is unique; whether you like it or not, everyone has a perspective they want to share.
Plain and simple: It’s worth yapping about.
Guy Kawasaki
This piece was originally published on Guy’s blog How to Change the World and is posted on DMW with the author's permission. Guy’s bio can be viewed here.
Comments
Great food for though!
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