Arguably the biggest challenge that businesses face today is for their brand to be ‘known’ — seen and heard – by clients and potential clients despite the onslaught of marketing noise bombarding our eyes and ears from all directions. Newspapers. Magazines. Television. Radio. Social media websites. Emails. Blogs. Even if someone tries to ‘turn off’ the noise and disconnect from telecommunications, it would still be impossible in the industrialized world to completely avoid marketing messaging. Billboards. Bus benches. Street signs. Unsolicited circulars (a/k/a junk mail). Marketing is everywhere. The challenge for any businesses, then, is to cut through the clatter so that potential customers can receive their specific message.
Yet, some messages are being delivered to millions of people with little cost or effort. That is what happens when a video ‘goes viral’. Case in point. One 30-minute video posted on March 5, 2012, just 13 days ago, has been viewed 77,384, 697. That same video has also been shared on Facebook 8,012,263. Since the average FB user has 120 confirmed friend connections, that means that potentially, in time, 961,471,560 people may end up viewing that video. (Note: Studies also show that people will remain watching a video three times longer when it has been shared by a friend, as opposed to finding it online themselves.) Additionally, that video has been posted on 7,472 blogs and has had 643,616 people post comments about it. Indeed, that video is currently the #1 video online, according to the Video Viral Chart. What causes a video to ‘go viral’ (marketing-speak meaning to spread like a virus)? Opinions abound. But new research provides some real insight on what causes a video to ‘go viral.’ Read on to learn more. Continue reading





