Wide World of Technology
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Has anyone had a positive FIRST-HAND experience with facilitating a word-of-mouth campaign? (either as a client or in an agency).
What is your opinion?
This same word-of-mouth strategy has prompted another partner of mine, Barnes & Noble, to call my network their most important B2B partner.
You may not have heard of the energy drink product, XS Energy, but you will. We're number two under Red Bull and gaining. This is one of my products. Because of word-of-mouth and our network, XS went from a million in sales a year, to a million in sales a week--in 11 days!
Let me know if you'd like to learn more about my company.
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The Internet
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The internet was first made available for commercial use in June 1992, but had almost no support from the business community. From January of 1992 to July of 1997, I worked with groups of publishers, bbs operators, and businesses to promote the commercialization of the Internet. In 1993, the online-newspapers mailing list had only 40 members, mostly low-level programmers. By November of 1994, there were nearly 4,000 publishers trying to establish their first web sites. By June of 1995, there were nearly 8,000 online publishers including spin-offs that had weird names like Yahoo, Infoseek, CNet, and ZDNet. Add to that, the hosting companies who helped businesses set up advertizing on the web, and advertizing agencies who began connecting the two and the effort quickly snowballed into now nearly 30 million Internet servers world-wide.
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Linux and Open Source
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Linux was a similar word-of-mouth campaign. Microsoft had an advertizing budget of nearly $4 billion per year in 1993. Linux, which had grown from about 1,000 users in January of 1992, had gained the support of developers from hundreds of companies and organizations. The advertizing was almost entirely word-of-mouth via Linux advocacy groups and advocates posting to other newsgroups.
By the end of 1994, Linux was winning "Product of the Year" awards. By 1996, Linux was challenging Microsoft for the PC Server market. In 2002, Linux is the fastest growing segment of the PC market. Add to that, Linux is now Microsoft's most successful competitor. Linux still has a very small direct advertizing budget, with only IBM actually mentioning Linux by name in national advertizing campaigns. Dell and HP allude to "flexibility" and "not tied down to proprietary technology", but don't directly mention Linux.
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Word of Mouth - keys to success
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The biggest challenge in a word of mouth is that you have to engage in dialogues, in communities or forums with common interests. These dialogues will often involve "hecklers", and those with a negative agenda. To have a discussion about Linux, you have to have people who like Microsoft Windows challenging you and engaging in conversations. To have a discussion about Internet, you have to have people who have a vested interest in Print, mass-media, and other competitors.
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Honesty
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These competitors will look for and identify the "warts" in your product. You have to "fess up" to anything that isn't working as well as you'd like. You can even tell people when you've fixed the problem, and how you dealt with it. The challenge is that you can't have "salesmen" trying to tout their product as being "perfect and defect free", because they will quickly lose credibility.
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In some cases, detractors will point out design differences as flaws. Rather than just saying "ours is better", a good advocate (as opposed to a good salesman) should try to frame the choices as appropriate to different markets. Of course, you want to frame your choice as that which appeals to the largest market :-)
I was using the internet in the early 1980s. I made the first-ever publicly-accessible, interactive online database (for the HR industry) sometime around 1983.
I think that you are referring to the World Wide Web, based on that great British invention: html.
Other than that, I agree with your comments whole-heartedly ;)
Techniques for discovering and "seeding" word of mouth and testimonials vary widely - My experience ranges from products as mundane as tires to those as emotionally charged as luxury automobiles - You are essentially seeking an engaging story or an experience that can internalized by others in your target. Once you have the story, a variety of community building, media and technology stragies can be evaluated against objectives and resources.
Steve Stepanek
sfstepanek@broadbandagency
www.broadbandagency.com
Best regards,
Alexander Bulgakov
Quantum Art
aleksandrbulgakov@artq.com
http://www.artq.com
And yet, HOW does one ATTRACT and/or RECRUIT the right people to build your "community" (or communities)? All the typical be-nice rules would seem to apply - but are there other considerations? After all, word of mouth can work for you, or against you. . ..
Even though what she did could work for a small business with really close intimate relationships with customers, it will not necessarily work for a larger business – I’m actually pretty sure it won’t.
Best regards,
Alexander Bulgakov
Quantum Art
aleksandrbulgakov@artq.com
http://www.artq.com
Eric Wholley
ewholley@mediaone.net
pw.
patrick@idmg.org
Andi
There's no way a company with 600,000 customers can expect to communicate on a personal level with customers, unless they can develop a system where customers support other customers. This is in a way what Amazon did with their review system, and they were very successful with it.
Eric Wholley
ewholley@mediaone.net

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