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Friday, September 21, 2007

Distributed Marketing – Part II

So, in Part I we were asking ourselves: If we set out to create the first distributed marketing program, what might it look like? (I am aware of course that someone may have done this before. If you know about it, please share.) By looking at the distributed computing model I identified three elements that seem to make it work:

a) Its is quick and easy to do

b) It is altruistic

c) It's cool technology

The first example I used, Toyota and a new Hybrid model, was as admittedly a bit of a softball. So, we left off by asking: What about a tougher challenge? What about a pure marketing play?

Let's take a product and brand that has no connection to a “cause”, say Coca Cola and their Mountain Dew product. Now what can we say about Mountain Dew? Its established, its edgy, and it has a youth slant.

If we deep dived into the brand-loyalist profile I am guessing there is a desire there for a sense of belonging. If that is the case then I think that would be the insight to leverage.

I could envision a program that pits the Dew loyalists against the “other” guys, some soft drink that is less hip. The message to the loyalist could be something to the effect “the Dew Nation is taking over!” Those poor people drinking that other stuff need to be rescued! The invitation to them could be to join the effort by donating space on all of their electronic communications.

We could create a small download that when installed would automatically insert the Dew rally cry and call to action into all the participants IM's, emails, My Space, etc. To spice it up we could also provide a mass incentive like free six packs if the goals are met, individual contribution tickers and incentives, and program dashboards. That actual success could be measured via how many new drinkers self-identify on a micro-site using unique codes from caps/cans.

So let's look at this through the lens of the three elements:

a) Easy – Quick download and install.

b) Altruistic – While not moral in nature it would allow a fun way for loyalist to support a favorite brand. The incentives cloud this element a bit.

c) Cool Tech – Done right, the interface and tracking elements could be very cool

At the end of the day this is really a flavor of viral marketing. However, it is interesting to look at the possibilities through this distributed-computing lens.

Well thanks for letting me share that. I hope it will stay out of my head for a while now!


J

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hey Jerry - good post, and you should check out socialvibe.org - they've got this whole thing going on.