Viral Marketing
A lot of words
have been used to describe viral marketing, even though the name
itself implies it all. Think about a virus for a moment, how it seeks
out then inhabits other systems around the body. Now imagine that
virus in a positive way, seeking out and inhabiting many places on the
Internet.
There are essentially two forms of viral marketing in broad operation
around the online world. They are known individually as "Cross
Promotion" and "Co-Marketing." They differ in their goals, but perform
the same viral task, that of identifying common markets and trading
information to attract attention from each other's assets. This may
seem to contradict common business practice; for example, one wouldn't
expect to find McDonald's displaying ads at Burger King. The Internet
is different.
Cross Promotion
Cross promotion means finding other businesses like yours and trading
information. Your first step is to identify those sites that exhibit a
definite similarity with what you do. For example, if you have a site
about regional travel opportunities, you would seek out other index
sites, as well as specific travel outlets, such as motels,
transportation businesses, tour guides, restaurants, etc. Find
professional looking sites that you find appealing and interesting.
Now that you have a list of sites, and you've collected contact
information about those sites, you're ready to set your marketing
virus loose. Try to individualize each message, and email each of your
contacts by expressing enthusiasm about the market you wish to share.
Generate some excitement!
What you are looking for is the ability to exchange information in the
form of website placements and email offers. Don't limit yourself to
swapping banners or newsletter ads. You want to take things a little
further. If you own a mailing list, suggest a dedicated, solo swap,
where their subscribers learn all about you, and yours about them.
Offer articles for publishing on a topic of interest if your partner
site is publishing content. On a website, you're looking for
"integration" and not "advertising." Get into the site's navigation
system, for example. Supply content in the form of articles for
resource pages.
If you have the ability, you can actually template such pages into the
look and feel of the other site, then send them an email with a URL to
view the page. In our example above, you could have articles about the
various towns in your regional travel site, and have specific target
sites, like motels, take your page for inclusion on their own site.
They can either use your code, or just link to your page, which is
wrapped in their template.
Alternatively, you might have a search function at your site, which
you could offer as a service to other sites, free of charge. This
invitation then adds a functionality to the other site and generates
interest in you as the supplier. All website owners are looking for
good content, as well as enhancing their sites' functionality. If you
can use your site to help them, you both win and the virus grows. The
point is to be innovative, and to see how your ideas can benefit the
site you with which you want to cross promote.
Co-Marketing
Co-marketing differs from cross promotion in what is being traded. In
cross promotion, the emphasis is on information to attract visitors.
Co-marketing attempts to further the trade by exchanging information
aimed at generating revenue.
To continue with our example, a basis for co-marketing could exist
between a motel owner and you through referral compensation from your
site for locating a new customer. This could be achieved with online
coupons, or even an ecommerce reservation system. Or it could work as
a custom affiliate program where your clicks are traceable to sales at
the other site.
As the above scenario suggests, another difference between
co-marketing and cross promotion is that co-marketing information does
not necessarily have to be displayed by both parties. That's not to
say it can't work both ways. Let's say you sell search engine
submissions. You could sell your service through a site that sells
domain names. Both markets are identical � webmasters. But you are
selling totally different products. Now you can sell domain names, and
your partner can sell search submission services. By co-marketing, you
not only expand your reach, you have the ability to expand your
inventory as well.
The really fantastic thing about co-marketing online is the low cost
of integration. In the brick and mortar world, you're looking at
packaging, shipping, stocking, and retail costs. On the Web, even if
you don't know how, you can find somebody who can make the electronic
integration take place at a tiny fraction of what it would cost to
reach the same audience in the physical marketplace.
Summary
Viral marketing efforts, no matter how small, will always increase
your visitors over time. Giving careful consideration to your first
tasks of identifying and contacting those that share your online
market will substantially enforce the vigor of the virus.
As you form more alliances with other website and list owners, the
virus spreads. What's even better, as you grow, so does the number of
people that will try to virally market with you, and your inbox will
collect pleas to do exactly what you did with your original contacts.