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Viral Marketing

1996
  • Jeffrey Rayport
Office scene depicting professionals brainstorming viral marketing strategies in economics.

(generated image for illustration only)

Viral marketing describes any marketing strategy that encourages individuals to pass on a marketing message to others, creating the potential for exponential growth in the message’s exposure and influence. Like viruses, such strategies take advantage of rapid multiplication to explode the message from person to person. It is a form of amplified word-of-mouth, often facilitated by the internet.

Viral marketing is a technique that leverages pre-existing social networks to produce exponential increases in brand awareness. The core principle is to create content or a campaign that is so compelling, funny, or interesting that users feel an intrinsic need to share it with their friends and contacts. This self-replicating process is analogous to the spread of a biological virus, hence the name. Early examples included the Hotmail campaign, which appended a promotional message to every outgoing email sent by its users, effectively turning its user base into a marketing army.

For a campaign to go viral, the content must typically evoke a strong emotional response—humor, awe, surprise, or even anger. It must also be easy to share. The rise of social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok has been a massive catalyst for viral marketing, providing frictionless channels for rapid dissemination. While some viral successes happen by accident, most are the result of carefully planned strategies that understand target audience psychology and social network dynamics. Marketers often “seed” the viral content by initially sharing it with a small group of influential individuals, hoping they will propagate it to their larger networks, thereby initiating the viral cascade.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 3301
– Economics

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Revolutionary

Usage

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • Metcalfe’s law (the value of a network is proportional to the square of the number of users)
  • Chain letter concept
  • Epidemiological models
  • Diffusion of Innovations theory

Applications

  • viral videos on youtube and tiktok
  • internet memes
  • email chain letters (early form)
  • refer-a-friend features in apps like dropbox
  • shareable social media challenges

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

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Related to: viral marketing, social media, content marketing, exponential growth, buzz marketing, memes, word-of-mouth, digital marketing.

Historical Context

Viral Marketing

1992
1992
1993-07-22
1996
1998
1999
2000
1991
1992
1993
1994
1997
1998
1999-05-01
2000

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

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