Tuesday 7 May 2013

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Build Great Backlinks has posted a new item, 'The Secret Recipe for Viral
Content Marketing Success'


Posted by KelseyLibert
This post was originally in YouMoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it
provides great value and interest to our community. The author's views are
entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc.

Let's assume you know the basics: content marketing is one of the best ways to
engage with audiences and potential customers online. It is useful for improving
search rankings, increasing brand engagement and loyalty, increasing brand
visibility, and encouraging social sharing and interaction. If you are a
consumer-facing company in this day and age, you simply cannot keep up with the
competition if you are not actively building your content marketing skill set.

Easier said than done though, right? Youve probably dabbled in content
marketing before, or maybe even hired a top agency. Maybe you have even seen
some results; a few links here, a few hundred shares there, but then what?
Certainly no fireworks, no massive ranking improvements, and no lead or sale
increases. Maybe it wasnt the panacea youd hoped it might be. Short on time and
money, you probably gave up and reinvested your money into tried and true
marketing practices that could at least drive a few conversions. You chalked
content marketing up to something too expensive or too difficult to find any
real success with.

If any of this resonates with you, you are most definitely not alone. Doing
content marketing properly is no easy task, and to beginners it can seem to be
next to impossible to create anything that will stand out and get noticed. Add
to that the explosion of agencies who claim to be gurus and deliver tragically
poor results, and the whole content marketing arena can start to feel like a
convoluted mess that cant deliver on its promises.

So, what do you do? Other tactics are losing efficacy, your site is losing
rankings, you cant get social engagement for the life of you, and your
frustration level is at an all-time high.



You go back to the beginning, and you relearn the truth about what it takes to
come up with content that works: content that shows what content marketing can
really do for your business. Content marketing that can transform a company
overnight.



When content goes viral: The example above shows a near 10 fold increase in our
client's organic search traffic (from Google alone) after a single successful
viral campaign. The big spike in the beginning of December marks the launch of
the campaign.

Step 1: Understanding the truth about your competition

You may assume when you first begin that your only competition are your
business competitors, the companies online that fight for the same search
phrases, or sell the same products or services. When it comes to content
marketing, these businesses are only the beginning. What you must remember is
that when creating content, you are fighting for attention against EVERYONE; all
content creators, not just businesses. Your content must stand its ground
against those who are creating content for entirely non-commercial reasons. This
means that when coming up with your campaigns, you must not only do better than
your competitors, but you must do better than almost everyone talking about your
subject area.

Step 2: Engagement is good, but viral is better

In content marketing, going the incremental route can be an effective way to
go. Loyal audiences can be built by creating a great deal of relevant, useful,
but not particularly viral content. Through persistence and often grueling
content creation schedule it is possible to find a positive ROI over the long
term. If you have the capacity to pump out 5-7 thoughtful and moderately useful
pieces of content weekly, eventually you will likely see good results. However,
as Rand Fishkin said, you have to "be willing to fail for a long time.



In fact, for companies that can afford it, this can be an essential piece of
the content marketing pie, and it is often something we recommend to our clients
who have longer timelines. But this style of content marketing will not change
your business in the short term. It can take years of consistent effort to see
substantial improvements in rankings and in audience growth.

What if you dont have years; dont have the time, energy, or budgets to create
compelling content on a regular basis; or simply need to build an audience fast?
The answer is this: you must create something viral; content that can spread in
a way that creates massive attention. Content that will boost you above the
writhing masses, and make others take notice.

Below, you can see our viral content marketing campaign results, which impacted
our clients 271% organic traffic increase. It's important to note that these
results were generated by a single outreach placement on Buzzfeed.com, with a
nofollow link.



Step 3: Understanding what it means to go viral"

If you have done any reading on viral marketing, you have probably come across
attempts at formulas for describing virality, but none that have made it very
concrete beyond the understanding that to go viral means to have a high level of
visibility. The truth is that virality and the act of going viral isnt really
all that complex. Having something go viral relies on having specific values for
three important variables. These variables include:

Viral coefficient: the total number of new viewers generated by one existing
viewer. As content creators this is the number you should be most concerned
with, it is basically a score of how shareable your content truly is.



Viral cycle time: the amount of time it takes before all these new users have
been generated by a single initial viewer. In content marketing, the viral cycle
Time can be thought of as the amount of time it would take for a viewer who had
a piece of content shared with them to view the content and then decide whether
or not to share it themselves. The viral cycle time for sharing content is
usually no longer than 1-2 days, though in some special circumstances, it can be
longer. For the purposes of our discussion here, we will define the viral cycle
time as one day.



Total available market: the number of people online who might be interested in
sharing your content. For broad-appeal type pieces, this number could be in the
hundreds of millions. For niche content, this could be as low as several hundred
or several thousand people.



Ive adapted a spreadsheet that looks at how these factors actually influence
the anatomy and eventual success or failure of a piece of content. The bones of
this spreadsheet were originally created by Mark Devisser. Feel free to make a
copy of this document and play around with the three variables mentioned above.
As a note, you will likely notice some key aspects of virality just from playing
with this including:


True virality along with the telltale hockey stick graph can not be created
without a viral coefficient of greater than "1." The higher the coefficient, the
faster the spread of the content and also the sooner and more abrupt the hockey
stick you will see on the graph.

The size of the initial seed is important for the length of time from the
initial publishing it takes for virality (hockey stick) to happen. The larger
the initial seed, the sooner you will see a potential viral effect, assuming the
coefficient is still greater than 1.

Extending the cycle time will extend the length of time it takes to see a
viral effect (hockey stick) Fortunately, with web based content, the cycle time
happens extremely quickly thanks to social channels and the nature of digital
content. If you were measuring the virality of say a snail mail chain letter,
the cycle time would be on the order of weeks, and creating virality would take
much longer assuming a viral coefficient greater than 1.

The size of the Total Available Market has an enormous bearing on the total
number of cumulative views. This makes it extremely important to think about
your target audience during idea development. If you want a viral smash, you
must have content that appeals to the masses (more on this later).


Step 4: Creating content with a viral coefficient above 1

So, understanding what virality is great, and understanding the levers for
virality is even better, but how does this translate specifically to content?
How do you take the ideas we just learned and make them work for you in your
content marketing efforts?



To begin, the first, most important, and most difficult step is to create a
piece of content that you think will likely have a viral coefficient greater
than 1. When it ultimately comes down to it, there is no perfect way to gauge
whether or not a particular piece of content will have a viral coefficient above
1. Ultimately, you wont know until your content gets out onto the Internet.
However, by exploring the top-level qualities that exist within most viral
content with a coefficient above 1, it is possible to give yourself a much
higher probability of viral success.

Strong emotional drivers

Put simply, emotions drive almost all behavior. When an emotion is triggered in
your brain, your nervous system responds by creating a subjective experience
(feelings). A great deal of your decisions are informed by your emotional
responses because that is what emotions are designed to do: to appraise and
summarize an experience and inform your actions. The stronger the feeling, the
more likely to spur a responsive action.

When it comes to sharing online, the potential actions related to emotional
activation are relatively simple. Essentially there are four options for your
typical content consumer when approaching a new piece of content.


Engage or disengage

Share or dont share


In order for a content consumer to share, they must engage first with the
content, and then make the decision to share that content. These actions are
mediated entirely by emotions. Many brain researchers and scientists agree that
emotion of interest is continually present in the normal mind under normal
conditions, and it is the central motivation for engagement in creative and
constructive endeavors and for the sense of well-being. Interest and its
interaction with other emotions account for selective attention, which in turn
influences all other mental processes. Thus, in order to get someone to engage
with your content, it must first and foremost pique interest. It is for this
reason that titles are so massively important. Without a title that piques
interest beyond an undefined threshold, there will be no engagement.

Assuming youve piqued your readers interest with an interesting title and have
passed the first stage, your content must now convince the reader to share. The
decision making process for this, as defined by prominent psychologist Richard
Lazarus is as follows:


Cognitive appraisal: The individual assesses the event cognitively, which cues
the emotion.

Physiological changes: The cognitive reaction starts biological changes such
as increased heart rate or pituitary adrenal response.

Action:The individual feels the emotion and chooses how to react (or not).


If the cognitive appraisal spurs a strong enough emotion, and resultantly large
physiological change, the probability of action is increased. In the case of
sharing content, if the cognitive appraisal cues a strong enough emotion and
resultant physiological response to overcome factors that antagonize sharing the
reader will share the content.

So, how do we create strong emotional drivers in our content?

In the fast paced online environment, you will only ever have a short amount of
time to get the attention of a viewer. Your goal should be to capture the
attention of a viewer, and then engage them emotionally as quickly as possible.
The faster and more deeply you are able to engage their emotions, the more
likely the viewer is to invest themselves enough in the content to share it.
Lets by addressing speed:

The speed of emotional activation


If you are not able to convey the emotionally impactful aspects of your content
quickly, you are probably dead in the water. Highly viral content will
communicate its strong emotional impact within the first few seconds of viewing.
It is for this reason that visual, easy-to-understand, and easy-to-consume
content is generally the most viral. Take one look at viral kingmakers like
Reddit.com and you will notice that 90% of the frontpage content are static
images. This is also the reason behind the success of infographics (as well as
image macros/memes, animated gifs and several other mediums). Visual,
simplistic, easy-to-consume, infographics can make excellent viral content, but
only if they can extend the benefit of their medium and illicit a strong
emotional reaction as well.



Which emotions should we engage?


Conceivably, almost any emotion, given that it is strong enough is possible as
behaving as the primary driver of sharing. In practice, though, not all emotions
are as effective in driving sharing behavior as others. Unfortunately, there
have been very few studies on the types of emotions lead to sharing. Jonah
Berger, a professor at Wharton, has done some preliminary research in this area
by looking at the email sharing rates of New York Times articles. His findings
are summarized as follows:



The results indicate that positive content is more viral than negative content,
but the relationship between emotion and social transmission is more complex
than valence alone. Virality is partially driven by physiological arousal.
Content that evokes high-arousal positive ( such as awe) or negative (anger or
anxiety) emotions is more viral. Content that evokes low-arousal, or
deactivating, emotions (e.g., sadness) is less viral. these results hold even
when the authors control for how surprising, interesting, or practically useful
content is (all of which are positively linked to virality), as well as external
drivers of attention (e.g., how prominently content was featured). Experimental
results further demonstrate the causal impact of specific emotion on
transmission and illustrate that it is driven by the level of activation
induced. taken together, these findings shed light on why people share content
and how to design more effective viral marketing campaigns.



While this is a great start in understanding the emotional drivers of sharing,
it is a very incomplete understanding. In an effort to further detail the real
emotional drivers, I sought to understand the emotional impact of content that
better fit the criteria of most viral content (i.e. visual, easy-to-understand,
and easy-to-consume content).

Exclusive Fractl research project: viral emotions


*It is important to begin by noting here that the following experiment is not
scientific or widely comprehensive. Despite this, there is a good deal of
preliminary information that speaks to some of the most apparent aspects of the
emotional drivers of viral content, and the takeaways found are likely quite
valuable. Research of greater depth will likely bear out additional information
and more granular insights.* (Raw Data)

I began by selecting a group of content that fit what I believed would be
representative of the best of the best in viral content. To make sure I was
comparing apples to apples, I decided only to use static images instead of
written or multimedia content. Memes and inside jokes were also excluded as the
factors that lead to them becoming viral can be non-emotional and more difficult
to analyze or ascertain.

The source of the content I used came from the top 50 image posts of all time
on reddit.com/r/pics, a community of 3.4 million plus content voters. I selected
25 images that I felt could stand alone, ones that required no previous
knowledge to understand (Reddit tends to boost inside joke type content on
occasion, so post that fit that profile were excluded).

I then had each image coded by 50 volunteers for the emotions that were
elicited by each image as well as the strength of each emotion. The possible
choices for the emotions included:

Possible emotion choices











What we learned


The results from this informal survey on some of the webs most viral visual
content was actually quite amazing. Much of what we found mirrored the results
found by Jonah Berger, but we also found some interesting additional takeaways.
What we found was as follows:


Positive emotions were much more common than negative emotions (14 negative
and 184 positive).

Certain specific emotions were extremely common, while others were extremely
uncommon.


The strength of the emotional impact was a great indicator for the popularity
of the content on Reddit. The top four most popular posts on Reddit also had the
top four highest aggregate emotionality scores (sum of emotional strength score
totals).





Interest, surprise, and amusement seemed to behave as emotional multipliers
for positive emotions, and empathy seemed to act as an emotional multiplier for
negative emotions. 12 of the 25 images had Amusement, Interest, and Surprise as
3 of their top emotions and all images had at least 1 of the 3 emotions (either
Amusement, Interest, or Surprise).

Contrasting emotions seemed to be helpful in increasing emotional impact. In
the cases where negative emotions were present, they seemed to directly contrast
positive emotions, likely enhancing the emotionality of the image through this
contrast. Additionally, empathy seems to be a common emotion found alongside
popular content that evokes strong negative emotions.


Enhancing emotionality for higher virality

Its clear that emotionally evocative content is essential in creating
wide-reaching viral content, and that there are even some emotions that seem to
work better than others toward this goal, but are there other ways to expand on
emotionality for virality? In other words, how can emotionality be enhanced?

Increasing emotional identification with the content

Make your content visual

On a whole, visual content is better at conveying emotionality and being
understood quickly and easily. Therefore, images and video have a leg up against
written form content. It is for this reason that image and video sharing
dominates online. It is the reason the images and video dominate Reddits front
page each day and the reason 40 of the top 50 posts of all time on Reddit are
either images or videos. It is the reason we have all seen infographics,
animated gifs, and image macros have become ubiquitous. As a general rule,
visual content is simply more engaging.






Make your content interactive

Interactive content engages the viewers senses and attention in a more active
way than simple static content. By creating an experience that your viewers must
participate in, you necessarily enhance the impact. If there is an emotional
angle to your interactive campaign, it can increase the emotional impact
substantially. One excellent way we are seeing this happen recently is through
the use of parallax treatments like these.

Make your content personalized

Customized or personalized content is, by its very nature, better at engaging
viewers emotionally than non-personalized content. Emotions are more easily
evoked when the user can actually SEE themselves in the content, instead of
relying on empathy to put themselves in someone elses shoes. Some standout
emotionally compelling, personalized, content like this, illustrates just how
incredibly viral emotionally driven, personalized, visual content can be. Have
you ever created something with 12 million + Facebook likes? Try
emotionally-driven, visual, personalized, interactive content, and you might
just be able to.

Emotional stacking with lists

If you havent been paying attention to Buzzfeed.com lately, you should probably
start. They have mastered the art of what I like to call Emotional Stacking.

Definition: Lists of disparate visual content, linked thematically, into a list
that is purposefully structured to build up a specific emotional response.








This example, for instance illustrates the technique perfectly. A list based
image post of the 45 Most Powerful Images of 2011. With each image adding to the
emotional reaction of the user, by the time you get to the end, you have been
worked up into such an emotional state that the desire to share feels almost
visceral.



Growing the viral coefficient - Beyond the emotions

While emotions generally play the largest role in determining the viral
coefficient of a piece of content, there are other aspects that can contribute
significantly to whether or not a that content is ultimately shared. Additional
motivating factors can play a key role, specifically factors that convey some
kind of social benefit or ego benefit.

The social benefits of sharing:

Social incentive/reward to share



"Ingroup vs. Outgroup"


Content that makes the viewer feel exclusive, or in-the-know, or otherwise
included can often work very well as a motivator for sharing. This ingroup vs.
outgroup effect is one of the driving forces for the popularity of memes, by
sharing the inside joke the sharer demonstrates that they are part of the
ingroup.







"Altruistic"


Content that allows the sharer to feel that they are doing tangible good can
often incentivize sharing and substantially increase the viral coefficient. This
is especially true for content that has a strong emotional hook that creates
strong feelings of empathy. This is just one excellent example of an altruism
enhanced, emotionally-driven viral effect.









"Self-identity/image bolstering"


When users share content on peer-facing communities like Facebook, they often
make sharing decisions based on how the content will represent them to their
peers. What is it that sharing that specific piece of content will convey about
the sharer to their peers? Content that, when shared, would affirm the identity
of the sharer will be more likely to be shared than content that wont. This is
one of the reasons why emotionally driven content that relates to hot-button
social issues can often be extremely viral.








We saw this exploited (in the best sense of the word) extensively by companies
like OREO, with their pro LGBT rights campaigns over the last year. Sharing was
incentivized because so many people felt compelled to position themselves on one
side of the issue or the other, bolstering their own identity to themselves and
their peers using the emotionally evocative image as a vehicle.



Step 5: Decreasing viral cycle time

As I mentioned earlier, viral cycle time can be thought of as the period of
time it takes for a viewer to share from the time they view the content. While a
viral coefficient above 1 is needed for exponential viral growth, the timeline
of this growth can be fast or it can be exceedingly slow. It is the viral cycle
time that determines how quickly exponential growth will occur in content that
has a viral coefficient above 1. It is in the best interest of the content
creator to do everything they can to decrease the viral cycle time, to help
achieve exponential viral growth in the shortest amount of time possible. So,
what can be done to manipulate viral cycle time? To be precise, pretty much
anything that can spur the sharer to consume the content faster and share the
content faster. This includes, but is not limited to the following:

1. Decreasing consumption time


Conciseness of content is extremely important. The faster content can make its
impact, the faster the potential cycle time. This is another reason why images
tend to be so viral. They can be understood and shared at lightning speed. For
instance a viral image may take only seconds to consume, whereas a long-form
article, or long video may take many minutes or more to consume. The slower the
consumption of the content, the slower the viral cycle time, and potentially the
longer it would take for the content to go viral (assuming it has a viral
coefficient above 1). The takeaway here is to do everything you can to make your
content as concise as possible, so long as you are not sacrificing the impact of
the content. Dont make the mistake of sacrificing a 1+ viral coefficient for a
faster cycle time, because without it, you wont have any virality at all.



2. Increasing ease and speed of sharing


Making your content simple and fast to share is absolutely essential for
helping to increase viral cycle time. You should do everything you can to
include sharing tools for the most popular social sharing sites (Facebook,
Tumblr, Pinterest, Email, and Reddit) at the very least. You should also make
sure that sharing is set up properly to share a compelling default title and
text.



Step 6: The limitations of virality and the importance of audience.

Ive discussed generalities about the importance of emotional activation in
viral content, but creating successful viral content can often be a bit more
nuanced than simply creating something that will strongly engage viewers
emotions. It is also incredibly important to do your best to make sure that your
content is well suited for the audience you hope to target.

Now, if you are simply trying to create something massively viral, and you dont
really care about any connection or tie-in to your company or brand, your
opportunities for topic ideas are nearly limitless. In practice, though, this
isn't often the case. The goal is usually to create viral content that in some
way ties in with the offering of the company creating the content. In this case,
it is essential to carefully define a target audience for your prospective
content, even before coming up with ideas. The reception of the content you
create within this segmented target audience is what will determine whether or
not your content will become viral.

The considerations that you may want to make are multiple, and a future blog
post will cover this topic in more depth, but in general, it is important to
consider the following aspects of your audience in order to determine the
potential reception of any viral concept you are considering creating.


What types of content does your target audience like to consume?

What specific topics tend to be discussed within this community, and
specifically, what topics are held as important by this community?

What topics are controversial? What gets this community riled up?

What is the general Zeitgeist of the community you are targeting? What are
their commonly held opinions on social and political topics?

Who are their heroes and villains?

Who are their niche celebrities?

What is their unique history? Their legends and fables?

What sorts of emotions typically are expressed by your target audience?


Failing to understand your audience can spell failure. If you are unable to
understand them enough to know how to push their emotional buttons, and which
ones to push, you will have a high likelihood of turning them off from sharing.

Step 7: Considerations for fractal virality

A fractal is the mathematical term use for a system of self-similar repeating
patterns at different scales. In the context of viral marketing, it can be
thought of as an apt descriptor for so called viral expansion loops which are
created when content has functionality built into it that provides for users or
viewers to extend or create new viral content based on or as a part of the
original content. Generally, fractal content is user generated, either actively
(the user actually does something) or passively (the users data is used, but
they do nothing). Some examples of fractal content include:


Elfyourself.com

Fatbooth, Oldbooth, and other mobile apps

UGC photo or video contests like: crashthesuperbowl.com

Altruistic DIY concepts like Dan Savages It Gets Better campaign


By giving users an opportunity to utilize their own creativity through
personalization and user generated content, it is possible to create fractal
sharing and massive exposure. Keep in mind that all of the emotional drivers
discussed with viral content apply here as well, weve simply added an additional
layer or step to expand virality. Some important aspects to consider when
attempting to create fractal content include considering:


How can this idea be adapted, personalized, or altered while retaining the
primary message?

How have you enabled creativity? Is the functionality conducive to ease of
creation and creativity?

How have you encouraged users to create compelling emotional content?

How do you plan on curating or controlling the content? Is there a potential
for a negative reaction?


Conclusions


Viral and fractal content has the potential to reach and influence massive
audiences, but in practice can be exceedingly difficult to create. By
understanding your audience and the emotional drivers that motivate them, it is
possible to increase your odds of success substantially. Through careful
investigation of the elements of virality, in the future it will be possible to
continue to improve the odds of success substantially. Here at Fractl, we aim to
do just that. Keep an eye out for several new case studies that will help
illustrate the points made here through real-life examples of emotionally driven
viral and fractal content.
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