[Air-l] The Guardian: Online: Second Sight -- Melissa is a marketing tool
Ken Friedman
ken.friedman at bi.no
Sun May 20 02:42:31 PDT 2001
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Guardian Unlimited (C) Guardian Newspapers Limited 1999
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,3850829,00.html
Thursday April 8, 1999
Online: Second Sight
Melissa is a marketing tool
By Esther Dyson
Guardian Unlimited
Most right-thinking people hear about Melissa the virus and shudder. But
a few politically incorrect marketers are marvelling at her ability to
reach the masses overnight. Imagine attaching your marketing message to
such a virus.
In fact, that's what marketers are already trying to do. When this works
so well that it clogs e-mail systems, it's called a virus, but when it
happens with the active involvement of the human carriers, it's called
viral marketing.
The best viral marketing is not just word-of-mouth, as some people
carelessly assume. Nor is it multi-level marketing, where Juan sells to
Alice and then gets a cut of whatever Alice sells to Fred. It is when
users actively recruit other users, not for pay, but because they
benefit from a larger user pool, just as virus DNA benefits from the
spread of a virus.
As with any new concept, anyone can define the term. Steve Jurvetson and
Tim Draper of Silicon Valley venture capitalists Draper, Fisher,
Jurvetson, are the foremost proponents of the technique. They have even
posted an essay about it on their website, mostly describing their
success with Hotmail, one of their best investments, sold to Microsoft
last year for upwards of $300 million. Each Hotmail user, who signs up
for free, markets the service to others because of the sig file attached
to each Hotmail message: "Get Your Private, Free Email at
http://www.hotmail.com."
Each time the user uses the product/service, he's promoting it to
others. You could almost say that any campaign that gets the customers
to flaunt a brand name is viral marketing.
But getting people to wear your T-shirt is not viral marketing. Viral
marketing, as I define it, is where the original user gets a benefit
from the spread of whatever is being marketed. That is, it concerns
products or services that benefit from so-called "network effects" -
those same disproportional returns to early entrants that are the
subject of so much discussion concerning Microsoft.
That is why Hotmail can be viral in some cases, but not in others. In
the wired world, where everyone has e-mail, Hotmail user Alice doesn't
particularly benefit from Juan's using Hotmail, because she can reach
him as easily at Demon or on AOL. In the less wired world, where most
people don't have e-mail accounts of any kind, Hotmail can spread, well,
like a virus.
As Jurvetson and Draper say: "The Hotmail adoption pattern is that of a
virus - with spatial and network locality. People typically send e-mails
to their associates and friends; many of them are geographically close,
and others are scattered around with clusters in areas of high Internet
connectivity. We would notice the first user from a university town or
from India, and then the number of subscribers from that region would
rapidly proliferate. The beauty of it is that none of this required any
marketing dollars. Customers do the selling."
There's a delicate balance between ownership and reach: the ideal viral
marketing product is semi-proprietary. That is, it needs to be generic
enough for its use to spread quickly, but people shouldn't be able to
interact with imitations. At first, Internet telephony didn't spread,
because the proprietary systems meant you could talk only with a small
group of people using the same provider. When Internet telephony meant
you could talk with anyone who had a phone, it became much more useful,
but the few who had it had less incentive to push a particular brand
onto others. The current rage in viral marketing is relationship or
networking tools - Six Degrees or PeopleLink. A couple of times a week I
get e-mails from someone wanting me to join one so that I can make new
friends. Do I need new friends and contacts? Maybe, maybe not, but
enough people do that these services are spreading rapidly.
The business model here is advertising. Of course, sometimes the
marketer forgets about the business model: the goal is simply to sign up
users, and then let someone else figure out what to do with them. That's
what Mirabilis did with its ICQ instant messaging service. It acquired
12 million users before it sold out to AOL for $300 million.
The best current example of viral marketing is the new range of Gizmoz
from Zapa Digital Arts. Gizmoz enable you to build your own identity and
then have other people link to it. Instead of static business cards such
as Versit's (which simply sit in someone's "card" file and are sent to
other people), Gizmoz work as live links. You send someone a link to
your Gizmo; then, each time they look at it, they link back to the
original (either at your site or at Zapa's) and get the current version.
What's the benefit to Zapa? Well, in order to update your Gizmo - which
could be kinds of biscuits you're offering for sale or of your need for
a lift from Cambridge to London next Friday - you will want to go back
to Zapa for new and improved graphics.
This isn't viral marketing just for Zapa: it's viral marketing for
Zapa's users, because it lets them spread their messages to others. In
principle, you can "own" your own gizmo, but you can also share it. That
keeps you and other users coming back to each other - and to Zapa for
new shareable Gizmo components. So what's to keep everyone from using
viral marketing? The backlash is already in sight as some vendors start
moving towards multi-level marketing for products where there's no
benefit to the redistributor other than a commission. But just as the
difference between e-mail and spam is a delicate social matter, so is
the difference between gifts that delight both giver and receiver, and
using friends in a marketing scheme.
So what is the value that Zapa is giving to its customers? In exchange
for their attention, it is selling them the ability to get attention
from other people. Marketers want attention so they can sell ads to
people who sell products. People want attention because, well, they're
human. They don't want marketers' attention, which they know is
conditioned upon their eventually purchasing something. They want the
attention of other human beings. Good on them! But I have to add: in the
past, getting attention required nice clothes. Now, it requires nice
Gizmos. Is that progress? Or is it just human nature, reinvented? Or am
I just too cynical, and are Gizmos actually a tool for creative users to
express themselves with?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,3850829,00.html
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