Category: Viral ROI
September 7th, 2006

Verb: its what congress does. Not.

BallUncle Sam is ending its edgy, guerilla Verb campaign which was designed to get kids to work out and eat less junk.

True to form, Congress is pulling the plug just as the program is demonstrating effectiveness. According to the medical journal Pediatrics, 9 and 10-year-old kids who had seen the Verb campaign reported one-third more physical activity during their free time than kids who hadn’t seen Verb. Among girls ages 9-13, the campaign boosted free-time physical activity by nearly 27%.

"Pediatricians and medical groups have sounded the alarm about the lack of activity and poor eating habits of America’s school children. About 13% of school children are overweight, according to the Surgeon General, who recommends children get at least 60 minutes of moderate physical activity a day.

Part of the problem with Verb is that many adults weren’t aware of it. The campaign was specifically targeted at 9-to-13-year-olds, and ads aired around shows like Nickelodeon’s "SpongeBob SquarePants." Surveys showed 70% to 80% of school kids were aware of the Verb campaign, but the effort didn’t generate the same excitement among adults.

"There is not a tremendous amount of adult awareness of Verb, but we haven’t targeted them," says Stella Kusner, account director on the Verb campaign for Frankel, a Chicago marketing agency. "But without fail, every time we go out to schools or camps the adults and teachers are amazed at the excitement and brand recognition that kids have with Verb."

Verb also got off to a rocky start after critics complained the government was focusing too much on exercise and instead should be trying to improve kids’ eating habits to counter the advertising muscle of the junk-food industry. But the CDC has said it didn’t want to lecture children about what not to do, and instead wanted to focus on a positive message that celebrated physical activity…

The Verb campaign also included the Yellow Ball, a symbol of kids playing in the sun. The campaign is in the midst of distributing 500,000 yellow balls at schools, camps and family events. Each six-inch rubber ball has a number. Kids are asked to play with the ball and then log on to verbnow.com, fill out a "blog" about how they played with it, and pass the ball on to a friend. The goal is to let kids track where their yellow ball went and who played with it.

Currently there are about 350,000 yellow balls in circulation and 12,600 kids have "blogged" their ball. As direct-marketing campaigns go, the 4% blog response rate of the Yellow Ball campaign is "pretty good," says Ms. Kusner…"

"If no one comes forward it will cease to exist as it is today," says Ms. Kusner. "The good news is we’ve got a lot of people interested in advancing physical activity for kids."

Tara Parker-Pope in Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal

Man, that sounds familiar. Great idea. Easy to grasp. Well executed. Show’s success.  But is killed because people outside the demo didn’t see the work.

Or is it just me?

September 1st, 2006

9,300 years of video watched on YouTube. But still not profitable!

Wall Street Journal reporter Lee Gomes estimates we have watched over 9,305 years of video on YouTube.com in Wednesday’s Journal (8.30.06).

"The video-sharing site doesn’t make public much of the information it has about itself… But it’s possible to piece together that sort of information by "scraping" the site… I did a scrape of YouTube a month ago and found there were 5.1 million videos. By Sunday, the end of another scrape, that number had grown by about 20% to 6.1 million. Because we know how many videos have been uploaded to the site, the length of each, and how many times it has been watched (total views were 1.73 billion as of Sunday) we can do a little multiplication to find out how much time has collectively been spent watching them….

Also, nearly 2,000 videos have "Zidane" in the title. Who at a desk anywhere on the planet didn’t watch at least one head-butt video in the days after French soccer star Zinedine Zidane’s meltdown in the World Cup final? For all the talk of the Internet fragmenting tastes and interests, YouTube is an example of the Web homogenizing experiences.

YouTube videos take up an estimated 45 terabytes of storage — about 5,000 home computers’ worth — and require several million dollars’ worth of bandwidth a month to transmit.

Those costs are one reason that some predict YouTube will collapse under the sheer weight of providing a haven for every teenager with a cellphone camera eager to be famous for 15 minutes of video."

It is a sobering thought that the bastion of viral marketing isn’t a runaway success. I thought that the hallmark of Web 2.0 was that Internet businesses were meant to run in the black from pretty much the get go?

July 16th, 2006

Zindane Butthead Game: Plan ahead to catch the wave.

Picture_10 It took precisely 48 hours for the first viral web hit based on French Soccer star Zidane’s infamous headbutt, to debut on the web.

And what a hit.  Well informed sources at AddictingGames.com tell MortaBlog that the game received 500,000 plays within the first 48 hours; and has notched up around 2 million views as of today (July  17).

For those of you still dwelling under a rock, Zinedine Zidane, France’s captain and by most measures the Gaul’s top soccer star, pretty much  gave the World Cup to Italy by headbutting rival Marco Materazzil in Friday’s final. Zidane was carded and sat out the rest of the game on the bench. Italy went on to win the cup in a penalty shoot-out.

Unfortunately, our sources have yet to reveal what, exactly, Mr. Materazzil said to the hot headed Frenchie.

But we DO know that the "Real Butthead" game debuted without a major sponsor — and continues to spread without the guiding hand of corporate largesse.

And you know how upset we get when great ideas flame out without moving Product.

To take advantage of viral Web hits, creative agencies (and their clients) need to plan ahead so they can ride along on great viral opportunities as they appear, rather than playing catch-up, after the fact.

If so, viral advertisers will need to think along these lines:

1. Develop and fund a relationship with a promising web publisher like Addicted, AtomFilms (remember JibJab?) or YouTube.  The remedy is simple: if you want to catch the viral wave as it starts, cozy up with your favorite publisher and strike a deal BEFORE the event.

2. Establish the criteria for an effective and relevant promotional concept. Riffs on the World cup hold almost universal interest for lifestyle and beverage brands for sure; but with a little imagination more moribund products could also benefit from a viral boost.

3. Develop an effective messaging format for piggybacking promising viral ideas. Whether it’s as simple as hosting the concept in a custom player, or going whole hog and fully embracing the generation of user content by providing branded access to the necessary tools and creative know-how via templated applications like this one from SixApart (hosts of the Typepad series of blogging tools), marketers might draw benefit from a viral’s halo effect by easing the effective distribution and generation of the message itself.

4. To spread, viral ideas have to work on two dimensions. They need to satisfy the needs of the sender; and provide value to the sendee. Users pass materials along for their own reasons, not ours. This dilemma actually creates more opportunities for the innovative integrated marketer: ride along messaging for sure (think banners, coupons, brand messaging); improved user profiling (companies like BlackFoot, DoubleClick, AOL, Yahoo and Google are already well along the path of using click stream transactions to enrich visitor profiling and targeting); and full-on visitor capture through user subscription or registration.

5. Remember us? We brought you that fabulous video, game, joke, slideshow, voicemail or podcast. Probably the hardest part of any viral promotional strategy is to tie an independent idea to your marketing requirements. Did Crispin really pull it off for Burger King with Subservient Chicken? Many feel they did; many don’t. But as Crispin’s Alex Bogusky told Business Week"I like that they are talking about the work. If they aren’t talking, then your brand is dead."

500,000 people in just two-three days? All because a crazy frenchman lost his cool. You bet you could do with that kind of attention.


July 13th, 2006

Confess your sins, naughty reader.

Picture_7_1 New viral site shills kitchen cleaner at FiltyConfessions.com.

Mortarmark wonders if this is a trend.

Last week someone sent me a voicemail about cleaning up my dirty mouth from the Orbit gum web site (goodcleanfeeling.com). 

FlithyConfessions’ asks me to confess my secrets to a pal (via email).

Oh, and participants can win some cash along the way.

This Internet thing just might catch on.

June 22nd, 2006

Its your Bootie calling

Picture_30Test your fingering skills on this advergame for Sundown suntan lotion. 

Simply hover over a beautiful lady and click to develop your own medley.

Thanks Adrants.