The Viral Piggyback - A Traffic System.

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This is a blogging technique that I use to generate millions of unique visitors.

Kim.

I notice things. I notice, for instance, that Kim Kardashian would make an awfully good bookcase. Or a bike stand. Or both. I notice, as a further for instance, that many of our new marketers struggle when it comes to generating traffic. As such, then, I've decided to drag myself away from mental images of Kim, mental images of books bobbing up and down like so many boats on the marina outside my window, and have - to cut a long story not remotely short - decided to tap-out a nice little tutorial on one of the traffic systems I use; something I like to call The Viral Piggyback.

Before I begin, however, for legal reasons I must make one thing abundantly clear. Mention of Kim Kardashian should not be misinterpreted as a reference to the celebrity known by the same name; you know the one, the lady who would make a rather good bookcase, or a bike stand, or indeed both. I am, in point of fact, referencing a rather chubby neighborhood feline called Kim Kardashian. I should also like to point out, for legal reasons, that I am in no way suggesting that one should turn an obese cat into a bookcase, or a bike stand, or both. I do not, let it be known, advocate animal cruelty. I would never, for instance, allow any of my pets to watch Keeping Up With The Kardashians.

Not.

What . . . is viral marketing?

Let us turn to the industry definition, provided by a well-known and entirely fictional guru (that has only seconds ago been dreamed-up):

"Viral marketing should in no way be confused with that branch of internet marketing known as I Told My Wife I Have The Flu ("Please, Honey, Don't Come Into The Office. I Love You Too Much To Let You Catch This.") Because I Want To Secretly Play Fallout 4 All Day And Watch Videos Of Kim Kardashian, which, further, should in no way be confused with that long sticky-out thing attached to a tree. In 2010, Mat Cuts, notice the omission of two letter Ts to avoid any confusion with the esteemed gentleman Matt Cutts, made a curious observation at 2.14 pm on a Tuesday whilst having his afternoon tea: 'I think I have the flu.' This revelatory observation was subsequently immortalized on an internet marketing forum. Mat created a thread. The heading read: "I Think I Have The Flu." The content read: "I think I have the flu." But it is the first reply to the infamous thread that, dare I say it, forever changed the online marketing landscape: "Looks like you're doing viral marketing this week, mate, haha." Thus, viral marketing was born: online marketing conducted by internet marketers suffering from the flu. And, as so often happens in the dynamic and ever-evolving world of internet marketing, the term Viral Marketing has since been amended to mean something entirely different. So I am told. And if anyone does in fact know the meaning, please do enlighten me. For now, then, the definition of viral marketing is thus: Not a bloody clue. But I'm sure someone knows. In the meantime, subscribe to my newsletter, forget your mortgage payments this month, and purchase at least 1 of 437 upsells, and whilst you discover yourself unable to make head nor tail of said upsell or indeed upsells, perhaps sufficient time will elapse for someone to enlighten us."

Source: John (and I forget his entirely fictional surname).

Is.

When media on the internet goes viral - and any type of media will do: a cat playing a violin on Youtube; a violin playing a cat on Youtube; a picture of a cat uploading to Youtube a video of a cat playing a violin; an article written by a cat without any musical talent whatsoever and, if you want to know, is rather miffed that his cousin, Fluffy Winkle III, is getting so much attention, since, after all, the cheating bugger has never learned to play a single violin chord in his life and is in fact miming, sodding miming, to Lindsey Stirling - that piece of media has received a decidedly above-average level of social engagement. It has - gone viral.

Viral marketing is the practice of encouraging media, that either contains marketing messages or is in close and visible proximity to them, to be shared by internet users. Videos of violin lessons for household cats will forever enjoy heady engagement and thus do a roaring trade in the feline violin lessons niche. Contrarily, some forms of media are likely never to go viral; rather surprisingly, books on Amazon.com about being miffed at Fluffy Winkle III. As an internet marketer, why, you ask, would any of this interest us? Good question.

Why.

The newer marketers among us will have no knowledge whatsoever about a thing us old-timers still lovingly refer to as. As. I do know the name. Tip. Tip of my tongue. Starts with G. Goggles! No. G-G-G-G. Gondola? Yes. No. Goo. Goo. Sodding thing. G- Ah. Got it. Google. At one time - sitting comfortably, kids? - there was a vast kingdom, a far away kingdom, and to the people who lived there, it was known as That Place We Use For Chatting To Hot Chicks - That We Hope Are, At The Very Least, Chicks. Yes, indeed. A magical kingdom, children, where, no matter the size of your waistline, no matter the profusion of pimples on your nose, if you ventured to That Place We Use For Chatting To Hot Chicks - That We Hope Are, At The Very Least, Chicks, you were instantly transformed into Brad, yes, Brad, Brad, the most popular guy in college and also - also - the college quarterback.

It was, however, a kingdom without a king. But not for very long . . .

. . . Dudala-Duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh . . .

"I . . . will be your king!" shouted Google.

'Who said that?' said Bruce.

'What?' said Campbell.

'THAT!'

'You just did.'

'What?'

'You just said,' said Campbell, sighing with a hint of exasperation, '"Who said that." That. You said that.'

'Who. I meant WHO! Who said that. I distinctly heard - someone said-'

'No, no. I think you'll find you said that. Heard it with me own two ears. That. Never head o' this Who fella.'

'I see. Campbell?'

'Yes, Bruce.'

'Would you mind terribly holding this syphilitic cat suffering from nymphomania? Just for a moment, there's a good chap. Someone I need to strangle.'

'That Who fella?'

'Yes, that Who fella."

. . . Dudala-Duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh, dudala-duh . . .

Many moons ago, when Google ruled the kingdom, at least half a dozen marketers - and, according to John (forget his surname), "probably a good deal more than fourteen marketers" - looked towards Google as a source of traffic. Times change, of course. A kingdom's throne changes hands. Well, bottoms. And this is just what happened in That Place We Use For Chatting To Hot Chicks - That We Hope Are, At The Very Least, Chicks. King Youtube. King Facebook. King . . . Viral. Rulers of The Kingdom. Kings that, unlike those in other realms, give the local currency, instead of taking it away. What's that, you ask? The local currency? Traffic. Traffic is the local currency, and, as luck would have it, mention of traffic leads us back, somewhat meanderingly, I admit, to our question: "As an internet marketer, why, you ask, would any of this interest us?" For this reason: viral marketing has the power, when properly utilized, to yield more traffic for us than any other form of marketing. Yes, even more traffic than desposed king Google can deliver; since an effective viral marketing campaign (and all those social signals) will typically earn you favour (and traffic) with the once great king.

And so . . .

Piggyback.

The majority of bloggers, on this delightful revolving and simultaneously rotating rock, are wasting their precious time. Precious time, I hardly need to point out, that could be better spent watching videos of musically gifted cats. They are, to be blunt, doing this: publishing blog posts that few people, if any, will ever see. This especially applies to gurus with forgotten surnames; unless, of course, said gurus are publishing blog posts about making money (an industry paradox, where gurus with forgotten surnames are inept at making money and yet decidedly adept at blogging about making money and, thus, quite admirably I must say, do in fact make money by blogging about making money). The blogger will blog. The blog post will then sit in the corner of the internet, and, like a rather miffed kitten who no one appears remotely interested in ("You people amaze me. I said - you people. Look, has no one even sodding seen this? I'm writing. Tapping out a Kindle eBook. I'm a sodding cat. Writing. That-. Is no bugger amazed by this? I said-"), will go unnoticed. There is a solution. There are many. The Viral Piggyback is one.

When something goes viral, media or knowledge, we can piggyback that virality in the form of a simple blog post. And doing so, correctly, will enable our blog post to be noticed. Noticed, often, on a grand scale. The result of which is to receive the local currency in the land of That Place We Use For Chatting To Hot Chicks - That We Hope Are, At The Very Least, Chicks. Traffic. A currency that we can later on exchange for another currency. The type of currency we may use, for instance, to purchase violin lessons for our pet cat. When something goes viral, you see, this signals something very simple to us: people find this something both interesting and sharable. As a viral marketer we can use this knowledge. Instead of blogging in the dark, publishing content that may or may not generate interest, we can blog about something that we know will generate interest - because, wait for it, it is already generating interest. And there are two general ways we can go about doing so. We can put together original blog posts about a viral subject, or, using content curation, we can use a piece of viral media as the subject of our blog post, where we impart our personal thoughts on that media whilst also using it as a jumping-off point to expand further and, in other words, add more information and therefore substance to the media in question. Which, I think we can all agree, is crystal clear and requires no elucidation whatsoever. I do have three and a half minutes to kill, however, so - let's hop down a paragraph.

Our aim is to blog about something that we know people will want to know about. Lots of people. The reason we do so is because people are more likely to spend a few moments experiencing our blog post and, having done so, decide to share our blog post so that other people can experience it. This is the viral effect in action. The subject is a big one but let me break it down for you and give you a promised system.

This is the process:
  • We find a piece of media (relevant to our audience) that has gone or is going viral.
  • We use that media as the basis to put together an original piece of media of the same nature.
  • Or, we use that media, whilst wearing our content curator hat, as a means to talking about (writing about) that media and, simultaneously, as a springboard for expanding upon that media with original media of our own.
  • We publish our blog post, on a platform infused with social sharing and asset building elements.
  • We then seed that blog post. To seed media is to plop it in locations where people are likely interested in that media and will not only choose to experience it but also share it. Thus, we seed our media. We plant it. And, as people share it, the virality of our media grows.
  • Finally, we syndicate the blog post to our audience platforms: newsletters, Facebook pages, Twitter accounts, and so forth.
And now for a simple system, that even Guru With Forgotten Surname can use.
  1. Head over to Youtube.com.
  2. Type in a keyword relevant to your audience.
  3. Smack return on your keyboard.
  4. Tap Filters.
  5. Tap This Month.
  6. Tap Filters.
  7. Tap View Count.
In 27 seconds, you have exposed all of the viral videos on Youtube for your keyword, ranked in order of most viewed to least.

Thus: before you sits media that people, your audience, are interested in knowing about and telling other people about. Useful information.

You can now employ either of the 2 blogging methods:
  • An original blog post, based on something of viral interest.
  • A content curated blog post, based on a piece of viral media.
An example of the latter is this: A Post About A Happy Bull.

This is what you'll notice:
  • A viral video is the subject of the blog post.
  • A catchy (viral-infused) headline is employed.
  • A couple of paragraphs address and expand upon the media.
  • Social sharing options are highly visible and usable.
Once you have your blog post written:
  1. Publish.
  2. Seed.
  3. Syndicate.
You may wish to syndicate to relevant Reddit subchannels, to Google-Plus communities, to wherever your audience hangs out in great numbers. Point is, you seed. You seed and you, thus, aim to set the viral effect in motion.

And that, as they say, is that. Well, almost.

As bloggers, we have many options in regards content creation. Not to somewhat startle Fluffy Winkle III, but there is more than one way to skin a kitty. The above? One method. But not an entirely bad one (I hope at least 3 of you will agree). Before I nip off to watch cat videos, let me just leave you with something. The post about the bull? (Not one of my blogs, btw.) To date, 157,000 people have shared it on Facebook alone.

Imagine if, every day, you did a handful just like it.

- Tom
#piggyback #system #traffic #viral
  • Profile picture of the author Steve B
    Hidden in this mountain of loquacious verbosity is a quintessential marketing formulary.

    Steve
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    Steve Browne, online business strategies, tips, guidance, and resources
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
      Originally Posted by Steve B View Post

      Hidden in this mountain of loquacious verbosity is a quintessential marketing formulary.

      Steve
      If only my literary agent would speak so highly. Cheers, Steve!

      - Tom
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      I Coach: Learn More | My Latest WF Thread: Dead Domains/ Passive Traffic

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  • Profile picture of the author danieldesai
    Tears.

    That's what you've reduced me to.

    Do you gain some sort of sick pleasure from bringing an otherwise fine specimen of masculinity to a fit of girly giggling?

    But I'll forgive your transgression, since your post actually teaches valuable info.

    Great share, Tom, and I look forward to more.

    Regards,
    Daniel
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
      My work here is done:

      Originally Posted by danieldesai View Post

      Do you gain some sort of sick pleasure from bringing an otherwise fine specimen of masculinity to a fit of girly giggling?
      I do, indeed. You're far too masculine, Daniel, and, as I sit here in my fluffy Garfield slippers and Hello Kitty jim-jams, it delights me that I've taken you down a peg or two; I feel entirely more masculine now, so much so in fact that I may swap-out Hello Kitty for a Twlight onesie.

      Thanks for the thumbs-up! I'm an avid reader of your own posts, always seek 'em out in threads, so a virtual thumbs-up from yourself has made my day.

      - Tom
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  • Profile picture of the author nicheblogger75
    This is one of the best threads I've read on this forum in weeks! Thanks Tom for not only giving me a good laugh, but also for filling my head with even more ideas to extract currency from the Internet with!

    I happen to love blogging, and not to toot my own horn (toot toot), I am quite good at curating "trending" content into posts that can generate lots of traffic from social media. While I must say that a lot of these topics, simply because of the nature of them, don't result in large amounts of sales, often they can result in some good Adsense revenue and quite a few new subscribers. Not to mention that building your blog audience is always good for business, no matter what niche you're working in.

    I like to piggyback off trending topics by applying them to whatever niche I'm in. I often use trending topics at Twitter, apply them to my niche, and then share them in a few appropriate Facebook groups. The result can be a nice little avalanche of traffic. This is easy to do.

    Here's an example of what a niche blogger could do. I just went over to Twitter and saw this hashtag is trending "#IDumpedTaylorSwiftBecause." Seeing this I head over to Google and search the term "I dumped Taylor Swift Because." After doing this I immediately find that Calvin Harris just dumped Taylor Swift. Ok, so this is a very hot topic.

    Let's say you have a blog in the "get your ex back" niche. This is actually a really popular, and quite profitable niche. In about half an hour you could create a post that could easily draw in lots of social media traffic by "piggybacking" off this topic. The beauty part is you don't even have to create a lot of the content yourself.

    You could create a post and title it "10 Tactics Calvin Harris Can Use Once He Wants Taylor Swift Back." You can do much better than this if you think about, but this is not that bad and it's off the top of my head in 5 seconds.

    You can start your blog post with 150-200 words explaining the situation and why Calvin Harris dumped Taylor Swift, etc. Then you can head over to YouTube and search "how to get your ex girlfriend back." Find 10 really decent videos and under each video add 2-3 sentences of your own commentary (and maybe an affiliate link or two). At the bottom of the post make sure you put an opt-in form to capture subscribers.

    You can then share this post in a few appropriate Facebook groups, and of course you will DEFINITELY want to Tweet the post and include the trending hashtag in your tweet. This will bring in a nice trickle of traffic. Will it go viral? Who knows? In that niche, probably not, but I guarantee you WILL get targeted traffic. You can turn the post into a video for even more exposure and get traffic from YouTube.

    Another type of post that tons of wildly popular blogs do is curate trending tweets. Lots of bloggers may not realize that Twitter has an "embed tweet" function just like YouTube has an "embed video" function. You could create a post like "The Top 10 NASTIEST #IDumpedTaylorSwiftBecause Tweets on Twitter Right Now." Another one could be "The 20 Most Hilarious #IDumpedTaylorSwiftBecause Memes On Twitter." If your blog has good ranking power you could even get a nice blast of organic search engine traffic because a lot of people use Google and search these hashtags looking for more content about them.

    This is just a couple of good ways to capitalize on trends, and on celebrities. If you get creative you can think of lots more. For instance, Instagram is another social media platform that allows you to embed their content. Lots of popular blogs do this on a regular basis.

    Another example is let's say you have a dating blog. I just went to Google and typed in "guys who dumped Taylor Swift." You could come up with a great post for your blog called "5 Guys Who Dumped Taylor Swift And Why."

    I could come up with this stuff all day long, and so could YOU. "Piggybacking" off of trends, and celebrities in particular, is an absolute traffic GOLDMINE for bloggers. The best part - no matter what niche you are in you can apply it. Will every post you write go viral? Absolutely not. Things is, though, you only need ONE of your posts to go viral, and once that happens, well, I hope you are not on a shared server!
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
      Originally Posted by nicheblogger75 View Post

      This is one of the best threads I've read on this forum in weeks! Thanks Tom for not only giving me a good laugh, but also for filling my head with even more ideas to extract currency from the Internet with!
      It must have been a slow week, but I'll take the compliment. Cheers! Great post yourself. It was damn near perfect, if not for the lack of syphilitic cats - I mean, come on, man.

      Originally Posted by VincentD View Post

      Wow.. best piece of writing I've stumbled upon yet on a forum. Great stuff bro!
      Thanks a lot, Vincent, I really appreciate that. I dare say you've seen better but, like above, I'll take it.

      I'm off to watch cat videos. Have a good weekend, folks!

      - Tom
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  • Profile picture of the author VincentD
    Wow.. best piece of writing I've stumbled upon yet on a forum. Great stuff bro!
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  • Profile picture of the author dansilvestre
    Great stuff and an enjoyable read Tom.

    It's all about reverse engineering the process of finding viral content, starting to look at what is already working and model it instead of trying in the dark. Data never lies

    Looking forward to read more of these in-depth posts, that's the stuff we need on the forum.

    Where should I send the complimentary doughnuts to?
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
      Originally Posted by dansilvestre View Post

      Great stuff and an enjoyable read Tom.
      Cheers, Dan!

      Originally Posted by dansilvestre View Post

      It's all about reverse engineering the process of finding viral content, starting to look at what is already working and model it instead of trying in the dark. Data never lies
      Nail on head - hit. Yes, that's exactly it. And, to any struggling marketers reading, the above quote is a valuable one.

      If you are one of our newer members, let me show you what we're talking about. (So I can earn my doughnuts!)

      Let's say you run a gaming blog and you want to do a post about Fallout 4. Question is, what exactly do you write about?

      An easy way to figure it out is just to slap the keyword Fallout 4 into BuzzSumo.com and filter first for 24 Hours and, if nothing obvious jumps out at you, Past Week.

      If I look at Past Week, I instantly notice a theme: Bethesda (creators of Fallout 4) have just released mod support (May 31st) on Xbox One.

      Check this out. The top 3 pieces of viral media for Fallout 4 in the past week:
      1. Fallout 4 official mod support was 50 times more popular on Xbox One than PC. 3.3K Facebook Shares.
      2. Fallout 4 - Previewing Mods on Xbox One. 3.3K Facebook Shares.
      3. Fallout 4 Console Mods Launch, Here Are Some of the Best Ones. 3.3K Facebook Shares.
      3.2K to 3.3K shares is nothing to get super excited about but it at least gives me a hook of sorts: I need to throw together a blog post about console mods for F4 on the Xbox One.

      Problem: White Noise. Writing yet another Hey Mod Support Comes to Fallout 4 on Xbox One blog post would be white noise. (It's also already old news - to gamers.)

      I need an angle. I have my theme; just need my angle. So, I look through my Sumo data and something leaps out at me: "The most popular Fallout 4 mods on Xbox are guns, cheats and boobs." (2.9K Facebook shares).

      Got my angle. Well, I've got 2.
      1. Specific XB1 mod.
      2. Trending information about XB1 mods.
      I search for Fallout 4 xbox one mod in Google, filter for News, filter for Past 24 Hours.

      The top 2 headlines:
      1. The Best 'Fallout 4' Mod On Xbox One Is Wonderfully Simple.
      2. The Most Popular 'Fallout 4' Mods For Xbox One So Far.
      (I made bold the phrases above, because they're obvious viral headline phrases and it's a subject newer members should research.)

      To gauge how well those posts are doing, I throw both of those headlines into Sumo. Bear in mind, though, that this is just a gauge. I'm not comparing the two in terms of performance (because either one may have bigger or smaller sites, in terms of traffic, bigger or smaller social platforms or be better or worse at working the socials). I just basically want to see if those blog posts are getting some social play; to see if people are as interested as I suspect they will be.
      1. 204 Total Shares (in 13 hours).
      2. 10 Total Shares (in 16 hours).
      They're getting play.

      Even though I shouldn't be influenced by how the numbers compare, in reality, if I was doing this for real, I really couldn't help myself. Looking at those 204 shares, I'd know my next move: blog about one specific Fallout 4 mod on Xbox One, because 204 and 10 is a big gap (maybe #1 have more traffic, bigger socials, and I'd probably check that, but on instinct I'm attracted to the 204 share subject).

      I need video content. For this audience, especially (they expect it). To get an idea into which content types go viral, and how they compare to each other, check out this blog post.

      It seems obvious to me how I can get a viral post going here:
      • The subject-matter will be about a specific mod.
      • I'll have a video about that mod.
      • I'll write about the mod center being releases on Xbox One.
      • I'll have an infographic about the top 10 xbox one mods for F4 so far.
      If I do the above? I'm covering all my bases. I'm offering way more juicy information than any other media outlet in the past 24 hours or past week (that I'm aware of).

      Questions. Which mod? And which are the most popular?
      1. I search on Youtube and filter for the past week to get my mod. I'm not just looking at views here (although that's a top influencer); I'm really looking for views + a type of mod that I know has a chance of going viral. In other words, something really catchy.
      2. Likewise, but this time I make a note of which mods are getting the most views on their specific videos.
      3. Similarly, I throw each mod into Sumo.
      In about 30 minutes, I'm all done researching. It'll take me another 30 minutes to create my blog post (most of that time on the infographic). Throw in 10 minutes, maybe, for watching and rewatching the video. Add around 15 to 20 minutes to seed, and around 1 hour and 30 minutes after I started, I have my blog post out in the world.

      I should now be getting traffic.

      Originally Posted by dansilvestre View Post

      Where should I send the complimentary doughnuts to?
      Haha. You know the way to my heart!

      Here ya go:

      1 Tom's Office,
      He's Heard Mention of Being Dragged Around an Auction House This Weekend So He's Hiding Street,
      Doughnut Land.

      - Tom
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      • Profile picture of the author nicheblogger75
        Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

        An easy way to figure it out is just to slap the keyword Fallout 4 into BuzzSumo.com and filter first for 24 Hours and, if nothing obvious jumps out at you, Past Week.
        BuzzSumo is a fantastic tool for bloggers. I highly recommend their premium service because it will open up endless possibilities for coming up with viral content.

        I wanted to also point out that for those who like to curate, another site that they should definitely belong to is Scoop.it. It's a site that allows it's users to create "Scoops," which are basically just user pages relating to a specific subject where they can share all of their favorite content. This makes for a goldmine of specific content in one place. You log in and search your subject and you will have tons of relevant content in front of you in seconds.

        It's also great to use as a tool for grabbing all of the content you want to curate and putting it all in one place. For instance, you could create a "Scoop" around your niche and curate all of the relevant content you come across to your scoop. Then when you want curated content for your blog post you simply log in and pull up your "Scoop."

        It's also a great place to share your own original content so that other bloggers can pick it up and syndicate it.

        They also include stats such as how many times the content has been shared on Facebook, Twitter, and Google+.
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    • Profile picture of the author David Beroff
      Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

      And, as so often happens in the dynamic and ever-evolving world of internet marketing, the term Viral Marketing has since been amended to mean something entirely different. So I am told. And if anyone does in fact know the meaning, please do enlighten me.
      See the original articles, slightly dusty but still relevant:
      Rayport, J. (31 Dec 1996) The Virus of Marketing, Fast Company.
      Jurvetson, S. and Draper, T. (1 Jan 1997) Viral Marketing Phenomenon Explained, Draper Fisher Jurvetson.

      Thanks for the article, Tom. You just may have inspired me to finally get my butt back in gear to create AboutTh.is, which is essentially a way to let people do exactly what you are describing here, and expand on existing viral content.

      Originally Posted by dansilvestre View Post

      Looking forward to read more of these in-depth posts, that's the stuff we need on the forum.
      You can find more of such articles here:
      Articles
      as well as here:
      Warrior Forum - The #1 Digital Marketing Forum & Marketplace - Blogs
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      • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
        Originally Posted by David Beroff View Post

        See the original articles, slightly dusty but still relevant:
        Rayport, J. (31 Dec 1996) The Virus of Marketing, Fast Company.
        Jurvetson, S. and Draper, T. (1 Jan 1997) Viral Marketing Phenomenon Explained, Draper Fisher Jurvetson.

        Thanks for the article, Tom. You just may have inspired me to finally get my butt back in gear to create AboutTh.is, which is essentially a way to let people do exactly what you are describing here, and expand on existing viral content.
        David! I expect you've just made Guru With Forgotten Surname very happy.

        Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

        Let us turn to the industry definition, provided by a well-known and entirely fictional guru (that has only seconds ago been dreamed-up):

        "Viral marketing should in no way be confused with that branch of internet marketing known as I Told My Wife I Have The Flu ("Please, Honey, Don't Come Into The Office. I Love You Too Much To Let You Catch This.") Because I Want To Secretly Play Fallout 4 All Day And Watch Videos Of Kim Kardashian, which, further, should in no way be confused with that long sticky-out thing attached to a tree. In 2010, Mat Cuts, notice the omission of two letter Ts to avoid any confusion with the esteemed gentleman Matt Cutts, made a curious observation at 2.14 pm on a Tuesday whilst having his afternoon tea: 'I think I have the flu.' This revelatory observation was subsequently immortalized on an internet marketing forum. Mat created a thread. The heading read: "I Think I Have The Flu." The content read: "I think I have the flu." But it is the first reply to the infamous thread that, dare I say it, forever changed the online marketing landscape: "Looks like you're doing viral marketing this week, mate, haha." Thus, viral marketing was born: online marketing conducted by internet marketers suffering from the flu. And, as so often happens in the dynamic and ever-evolving world of internet marketing, the term Viral Marketing has since been amended to mean something entirely different. So I am told. And if anyone does in fact know the meaning, please do enlighten me. For now, then, the definition of viral marketing is thus: Not a bloody clue. But I'm sure someone knows. In the meantime, subscribe to my newsletter, forget your mortgage payments this month, and purchase at least 1 of 437 upsells, and whilst you discover yourself unable to make head nor tail of said upsell or indeed upsells, perhaps sufficient time will elapse for someone to enlighten us."

        Source: John (and I forget his entirely fictional surname).
        Glad I inspired you, matey. I have my moments!

        - Tom
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        • Profile picture of the author David Beroff
          Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

          David! I expect you've just made Guru With Forgotten Surname very happy.

          Glad I inspired you, matey. I have my moments!
          Heh. I'm curious if you could see yourself actually using AboutTh.is to do the piggybacking you describe.
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          • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
            Originally Posted by David Beroff View Post

            Heh. I'm curious if you could see yourself actually using AboutTh.is to do the piggybacking you describe.
            Just had a look-see at the AboutTh.is website, David, and if I understand things correctly (merrily chugging down coffee here and bleary-eyed) the software (a WP plugin?) adds audio functionality to blog post comments.

            If I'm right - it would certainly enhance virality. WP originally integrated commenting in order to enhance SEO and add further substance to page content. It has since been expanded, as you know, to incorporate social media.

            I believe I used a gamer blog as an example somewhere above. Yes, I did; talked about Fallout 4. In that setting, with gamers, your audience, with them being used to verbal chit-chat, it would work well.

            Think of your typical COD gamer hurling out trash talk on Xbox One 10 hours a day. Think of the proliferation of gaming videos, made not by professional marketers (predominantly) but by regular people, who often fall into marketing as an accidental byproduct of simply doing what they love: making videos about their favourite games.

            Gamers would be entirely comfortable laying down audio comments in blog posts. And it leads to a logical extension. What I would do is offer audio as your freebie, video as your paid upgrade. I'd like 30-second video functionality (or, better, the ability to set the time limit), with social sharing integration.

            Consider something, David: Tom makes a regular viral blog post and it receives, say, 50,000 shares. People are sharing the blog post. But what if you have even 30 video comments? And what if those are also shared? Statistically, people are more willing to share their own content. Now, the idea is not a new one, as I'm sure you know, but a decent software option has yet to impress me.

            What you'd need to do is build on the above. In a big way. The above represents my beary-eyed morning thoughts, pre-500 cups of coffee. In your shoes, I'd assess the current software on the market (duh), I'd make use of my viral marketing knowledge, and I'd develop the Rolls Royce equivalent, which I'd then extensively test test test (another duh). When that baby was humming along like a real Rolls Royce, I'd go to influencers: big hitters, pulling 7-figure (minimum) monthly hits on their websites/ blogs.

            Get their approval. Bring that website into 2016 (no offense). Put together the type of marketing campaign that would make Apple look like Forest Gump. Work your dangly bits off. Slap some clever souls in place to run things. Concentrate a vast portion of your efforts to keep that software (at the very least) current or (better) way ahead of the game, and expand (just like Forest Gump, sorry, I mean Apple) into related products and services.

            When you make your first $100 million, send Tom a doughnut.

            - Tom
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  • Profile picture of the author Jasmine Carter
    Super impressed with this information and definitely helped me to know what to put into my blog for content. Thank you!!!!!!
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    • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
      Folks: thanks for the thanks. Glad you liked it!

      Originally Posted by Jasmine Carter View Post

      Super impressed with this information and definitely helped me to know what to put into my blog for content. Thank you!!!!!!
      That's what I like to hear - action taking.

      - Tom
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  • Profile picture of the author ByEdvin
    Wow I can see that you LOVE to write, Keep it up
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    ★★★★★
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  • Profile picture of the author Boris Qs
    What a valuable piece of content. You would hardly find such a nugget from many paid offers nowadays. Thanks, Tom, and nicheblogger75
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  • Profile picture of the author David Beroff
    Thank you for your kind time and comments, Tom! It does mean a lot to me! Let me respond to your various points....

    No offense taken on the site "design"! I had just slapped a placeholder there in a feeble attempt to explain the idea. Posts like yours help teach me just how far I need to go before I've nailed it as far as communicating what's in my head to people such as yourself. (I'm usually pretty good at that, but for some reason, this particular service is tougher to describe verbally. I'm hoping it'll be a lot easier once it actually, yannow, exists.)

    The AboutTh.is service will let you put a small stamp with your verbal opinion on top of anybody's webpage, not just on blogs you control. You want to comment on a specific New York Times article, or a gamer blog post, or a Kim Kardashian video, just start talking about this. You'll get a shareable URL which presents that NYTimes page (or whatever) adorned with a little stamp showing your avatar and a "play" button. When they click "play", they'll hear you, and when they share, they'll share your URL.

    The free version gets your name and face out there, and maybe some bragging rights about how viral you are. Woo. The paid version replaces the small text ad block with a tiny version of your opt-in lead-gen form, so the public can subscribe and get more of your content, your newsletters, your brand. I sketched out a rough sales page for the latter a few years ago. [Note to WF Mods: That page doesn't actually sell anything; there's no "buy" button, and it certainly isn't an affiliate link!!]

    So, all of the software is hosted on my site; it is not a WP plug-in, (at least in its initial, basic form). The little stamp would appear on top of any page, not just ones you control.

    Yes, this should definitely promote viral behavior. If a visitor likes Tom's verbal commentary about a NYTimes page, that's what they share, not the underlying NYTimes article. Similarly, as you correctly point out, if a visitor lands on Tom's blog and then they verbally comment on it, they will be far more likely to share their own comment... which also nicely puts Tom's blog post in front of their friends' faces.

    As far as compensation, only Freelancer would offer to pay in doughnuts. I prefer to pay with cold hard cash. When people share those opinions, they're also indirectly encouraging others to do the same, and those links are already conveniently tied into the affiliate program. [Note to WF Mods: Said affiliate links are not actually given here!]
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  • Metrics for this one are doin' pretty good.

    Mighta scored higher, but I figure the WF algorithm sensed I was in mid-doughnut.

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  • Profile picture of the author agmccall
    Truly amazing post. I have been doing research, getting ready to start a new niche blog. I just did a youtube search using Toms search perimeters and the first three videos are perfect for the site and this month have over 250k views each.

    Life is good

    al
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  • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
    Originally Posted by David Beroff View Post

    The AboutTh.is service will let you put a small stamp with your verbal opinion on top of anybody's webpage, not just on blogs you control. You want to comment on a specific New York Times article, or a gamer blog post, or a Kim Kardashian video, just start talking about this. You'll get a shareable URL which presents that NYTimes page (or whatever) adorned with a little stamp showing your avatar and a "play" button. When they click "play", they'll hear you, and when they share, they'll share your URL.
    I'm impressed, David. And just like my wife, I'm not easily impressed. (Side note: after 17 years of marriage, it's no longer an issue, thank goodness.) You have hurdles, certainly. One being audience adoption. A case of, "Listen, you'll enjoy the gizmo, just so soon as everyone starts using it." But that can be handled. Gives me an idea, actually (just an idea mind you, undeveloped, spit-balling on a grand scale): a web entity, not unlike Youtube, where audio and video comments, from all around the web, are available. It would be like having a window that opens onto the world. "Your window on the world." Someone makes a comment on Facebook? Blammo. On Huffington Post? Blasto. All around the net - blammo, blasto, blammo, blasto. This type of operation would also inevitably give rise to influencers, and as a byproduct lead to many more accidental marketers (as mentioned above about Youtube), perhaps even millionaires. Taken to the extreme here, and like I say, just spit-balling, you have a bit of a monster on your hands here. The type that might one day lift up its virtual fist and slam it on the ground. And have everyone feel the earth shake.

    Originally Posted by Princess Balestra View Post

    Metrics for this one are doin' pretty good.

    Mighta scored higher, but I figure the WF algorithm sensed I was in mid-doughnut.

    Haha. Now this is cool. (Though I do expect coolness from Princess Balestra; middle name type of thing.) Thing is, PB, I want to take this as a compliment, I do, I do, but I know it's only because said face - is peppered with doughnut crumbs. See - I know what you're up to.

    Originally Posted by agmccall View Post

    Truly amazing post. I have been doing research, getting ready to start a new niche blog. I just did a youtube search using Toms search perimeters and the first three videos are perfect for the site and this month have over 250k views each.

    Life is good

    al
    My day was already looking up (thank you, Princess Balestra); it just looked up, got up, and did a backflip. Music to my eyeballs all, Al. Still amazes me that we can sit in our home office (or on Elvira's lap in the grotto of the Playboy Mansion, where you'll find me today, ahem) and put out a few thoughts into the world and have them be well enough recieved to do a little good. Cheers for your comments, Al. If IM is a donkey (and it is) I hope you kick some donkey!

    - Tom
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    • Profile picture of the author David Beroff
      Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

      I'm impressed, David. And just like my wife, I'm not easily impressed.
      Thank you, Sir!

      Given what you're saying, I guess I'd better go and actually build this creature. The main roadblock has been the ol' excuse of insufficient money/time, but I'm not gonna' cry in anyone's beer. D*mn the torpedoes; full speed ahead!

      Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

      You have hurdles, certainly. One being audience adoption. A case of, "Listen, you'll enjoy the gizmo, just so soon as everyone starts using it." But that can be handled.
      Thankfully I don't think that this will be an issue, because one won't need to be a site member in order to be exposed to the idea. (Did you know that the fax machine was invented in 1843, but didn't reach critical mass until the 1980's?) It'll simply work on all browsers, and so new people will see it in action, and some of them will want to join in on the fun. That's how I grew Freedback in 1997, where a tiny percentage of the general population would see it each day and join, which would then increase overall usage, so that the next day, the same tiny percentage of a slightly larger number would yield slightly more signups, and thus, exponential growth over time. I dig into this idea far more deeply in my book, Turn Funny Email into Cash!

      Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

      Gives me an idea, actually (just an idea mind you, undeveloped, spit-balling on a grand scale): a web entity, not unlike Youtube, where audio and video comments, from all around the web, are available. It would be like having a window that opens onto the world. "Your window on the world." Someone makes a comment on Facebook? Blammo. On Huffington Post? Blasto. All around the net - blammo, blasto, blammo, blasto. This type of operation would also inevitably give rise to influencers, and as a byproduct lead to many more accidental marketers (as mentioned above about Youtube), perhaps even millionaires. Taken to the extreme here, and like I say, just spit-balling, you have a bit of a monster on your hands here. The type that might one day lift up its virtual fist and slam it on the ground. And have everyone feel the earth shake.
      Sorry; now I'm the one that's mildly confused. Are you still talking about AboutTh.is, or something separate? What I think you are saying is to sort of combine everybody's feed (on a single topic?) into a single firehose... but I'm not certain I fully understand you here.
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      • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
        Originally Posted by David Beroff View Post

        Are you still talking about AboutTh.is, or something separate? What I think you are saying is to sort of combine everybody's feed (on a single topic?) into a single firehose... but I'm not certain I fully understand you here.
        Something bigger, but connected.

        Think of it like this . . . Imagine if Youtube developed a similar software solution and integrated it into a section of their website. They might, for instance, call such a section World. Tubers, when logged into YT, would be able to surf around the net as per, but when they come across a piece of media integrated with World Software, they can flip on their cam (computer, phone, tablet) and leave a video comment ABOUT that piece of media. The video comment will appear within the regular comment section on that media page (a blog post, for example) but will ALSO appear on the World section of Youtube and, simultaneously, within the tubers own channel.

        What you have, in effect, is a means of tubers to GROW beyond YT. Right now YT is stuck in 2000, God love 'em. Sure, yourself and your audience can SHARE. Share, though? In 2016? Approaching 2020? Getting a bit old. If I owned YT - or at least had a voice within it - I'd insist, every sodding day if I had to, that we addressed the 2000 issue. Youtube needs to lead the way. It needs to think beyond the norm, beyond the average. It needs to think many many steps ahead of even the most innovative competing brands. It needs, in short, to either expand on (make better, make workable) the type of idea I'm discussing or think of another way to propel Net Culture into 2020 and beyond. We, as tubers, need to grow beyond YT. Our presence (and, yes, our influence) needs to reach every corner of the net. Every corner.

        World should take us to Amazon. To eBay. To Facebook. To every last platform that agrees to participate - and, I'll tell you what, every last one will, even the big hitters like Facebook. Because, not to participate? Obsolescence. Business and cultural death. You give everyone on YT the ability to walk beyond the walls of YT? You create an instant army of people who will grow to love and grow used to walking beyond YT. And that type of army will topple organizations who don't play ball. People will come to expect this service wherever they go. It might be a stretch to say it could hurt FB (and others giants just like it) but I've seen giants fall, and often for the smallest of reasons. Why did Myspace die? We could debate all day but I'll save us the trouble and give you the reason: the FB user-experience. Full stop and simple as that.

        All of which brings us back to you, David. I hop on and off WF with 5 minutes to kill here and there and everything I'm saying here really should be judged in that light. This is me talking whilst sipping a coffee and listening to Free Bird. Upshot: I'm not wearing my This Person Can Pull This Off Hat, which is an essential piece of every IMers wardrobe. Partly, I find your software potentially pretty neat; the other 50% of me is just tossing around what I think, too, are pretty neat ideas. Can you pull off such a venture? I see your name around WF but I really don't know you other than that, matey. The concept I'm talking about (and really just giving the basic highlights) will require, goes without saying, massive capital and organizational structure. The other problem is you've engaged me here (not a criticism, though, just leading up to a point). There's a good reason I never give away in public anything I want to keep to myself. To give away that knowledge is often the death of its use for me. The knowledge falls into too many hands. Or, more so than myself, it finds better hands. It might be that way for World. Or maybe it's just one of those ideas that seems fairly neat when you're listening to Free Bird.

        What I'd do, in your shoes, is use everything above as a jumping off point for creative thought, backed up by what you can actually pull off. Maybe none of it will be useful. Or maybe one day I'll get that doughnut.

        - Tom
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        • Profile picture of the author David Beroff
          Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

          Tubers, when logged into YT, would be able to surf around the net as per, but when they come across a piece of media integrated with World Software, they can flip on their cam (computer, phone, tablet) and leave a video comment ABOUT that piece of media. The video comment will appear within the regular comment section on that media page (a blog post, for example) but will ALSO appear on the World section of Youtube and, simultaneously, within the tubers own channel.
          Got it. OK; thanks for expanding. So, AboutTh.is + video = your first sentence above, (with no permission or integration needed). Then for the sites which want to give said permission/integration, they can get the second sentence.

          I'll admit, the reason why I focused on audio and not video is that, when making a quick comment about a site, what's being said is what's most important; the video would simply be "talking head". But, yeah, if people really want that, I don't see why it couldn't be done that way.

          Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

          Can you pull off such a venture? I see your name around WF but I really don't know you other than that, matey. The concept I'm talking about (and really just giving the basic highlights) will require, goes without saying, massive capital and organizational structure.
          Well, I honestly wasn't posting here to "sell" myself, but, since you ask, I'll give the condensed version: Taught Computer Science at Rutgers University at age 18, graduated the following year. Wrote software for four decades, since age 11. Built Freedback.com to serve millions. Built a team of 20 (including three full-time employees) to buy and sell four million opt-in (voluntary and ethical) list subscriptions. My last project was managing the backend database and website for a US$15M fund portfolio with 500+ investors, until the SEC decided to intervene. A lot of my own personal money was involved there, and is now frozen, so suffice to say that one thing I do not have to offer is massive capital.

          Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

          The other problem is you've engaged me here (not a criticism, though, just leading up to a point). There's a good reason I never give away in public anything I want to keep to myself. To give away that knowledge is often the death of its use for me. The knowledge falls into too many hands.
          I used to worry about that, Tom... a lot. Now, not so much. (I found secrecy to be a literal pain in the neck from constantly looking behind my shoulder.) Yeah, there will always be competitors, but, by and large, most people are just too dang lazy to put down the remote and get off the couch.

          The other thought to consider is that there's much to be gained with transparency, rather than secrecy. This very thread actually proves that point.

          Originally Posted by Tom Addams View Post

          Or, more so than myself, it finds better hands. It might be that way for World. Or maybe it's just one of those ideas that seems fairly neat when you're listening to Free Bird.

          What I'd do, in your shoes, is use everything above as a jumping off point for creative thought, backed up by what you can actually pull off. Maybe none of it will be useful. Or maybe one day I'll get that doughnut.
          I'll at least give you, as a courtesy, the very first AboutTh.is Pro account. I'm pretty sure you'll be able to use it to earn enough to buy at least a dozen doughnuts!
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          • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
            Originally Posted by David Beroff View Post

            I'll at least give you, as a courtesy, the very first AboutTh.is Pro account. I'm pretty sure you'll be able to use it to earn enough to buy at least a dozen doughnuts!
            I'll hold you to that, you generous sod you.

            - Tom
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  • Profile picture of the author silveroaks
    That was one great post. We get a lot of 'How to's' and 'How not to's' posts but most of them are really general, long and boring. seriously some can even put you to sleep after having a long day online lol. But this one right here was informative as well as interesting to keep you reading till the end. This is how you teach the kids, keep them captivated through out the lesson. This 'piggybacking' idea is great. Keeps things interesting and GOING! (Y)
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  • Profile picture of the author discrat
    Silveroaks,
    Although you have been Bumping relentlessly and you need to stop, this Thread is just pure Gold.

    Really !! I forgot about it and nice to Review it again
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    Nothing to see here including a Sig so just move on :)

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