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What’s your word-of-mouth topic?

August 13, 2010 at 12:53 PM by Marc Berliner

A few weeks ago, I was fortunate to attend GasPedal’s Word of Mouth Supergenius conference in New York City. It’s nice on occasion to step away from my day-to-day work and just spend the day learning. The big win comes when I get energized and inspired to try new things that can make me a better professional. That’s what the day represented for me, and there are nuggets I took away that all professional communicators can learn from.


Word of mouth (WOM) is nothing new. In reality, it’s one of the oldest communication channels in existence. But, with the decline of some traditional channels and the emergence of social media, WOM is increasing in importance and perhaps now easier to spark and facilitate than ever before. One only has to consider recent phenomena such as Zappos’ customer service, the Old Spice guy and Dos Equis’ Most Interesting Man in the World.

 

 

It’s easy for most of us to spot successful WOM, but achieving it is another story. It reminds me in some ways of when I hear people talking about creating a “viral video.” It’s tough to do when you’re assuming you can guarantee something will go viral, which we all know isn’t possible. It’s the same with WOM – it takes time, a thoughtful approach and a pinch of luck. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try because WOM can be a powerful weapon in our ever-evolving communications arsenal.


GasPedal presented the “5 Ts” of WOM campaigns:

  1. Talkers - who will tell their friends about you?
  2. Topics - what will they talk about?
  3. Tools - how can you help the message travel?
  4. Taking Part - how should you join the conversation?
  5. Tracking - what are people saying about you?

For most people, it would be pretty easy to sit down for 30 minutes and figure out nos. 1, 3, 4 and 5. But no. 2 is the special sauce.


If you can’t give your stakeholders something interesting, fun, unique and surprising to talk about – no matter how well you do the other elements – you won’t get WOM. You need something they’ll remember, you need to tap into some kind of emotional connection and you need to make it easy for them to share. That topic could be something inherent to your business (hot doughnuts coming off the conveyor belt at Krispy Kreme, Swedish Meatballs at IKEA) or something you create (Jones Soda’s unusual holiday-themed flavors). Regardless, you need to take a step back and consider it.


So think about it. What will get people buzzing about your company or product? How can you get the power of WOM working for you?


--Marc Berliner, Vice President



Tagsmarketing wordofmouth bestpractices

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