Viral marketing is not a marketing strategy

Viral marketing is not a marketing strategy
Many times, viral marketing is seen as a "marketing strategy" that is interchangeable with other methods of acquiring users. That is, you go through three steps:
- Develop your product
- Think through a plan on how to make people use it
- Declare viral marketing is one of N approaches (along with SEO, SEM, PR, etc.)
Or perhaps you already have an existing product, and you have gotten interested in using a Facebook widget or something like that to make it "viral." If you are in this boat and think of viral marketing as a compelling marketing strategy, you're in trouble.
Successful viral products don't have viral marketing bolted on once the product has been developed. It's not a marketing strategy. Instead, it's designed into the product from the very beginning as part of the fundamental architecture of the experience.
Roelof Botha, the venture capitalist that backed YouTube, says:
Forget about adding "viral" to your marketing to-do list after your product is already on the market. You need to bake it into your business model from the very beginning. "Viral isn’t something you can just make happen," says Botha. "It has to be inherent in your product."
Viral marketing is not a product feature
Similarly, no single product feature determines the viral success of a business. I've seen several product pitches where the business is described as "viral" on slide 10 of the presentation, because of a particular feature, like:
- "Tell a friend"
- Widget embeds
- Addressbook importing
- ... or whatever.
No single feature determines the virality of the product - instead, it's part of a viral loop that connects a disparate set of functions into a cohesive motivation for the user to tell their friends. If the fundamental product doesn't drive a viral motivation from its users, then it's very hard to force it.
Viral marketing is a fundamental product design discipline
So what happens when you try to start a new viral product from scratch? Ultimately, you ask the reverse question of what most folks do. Instead of:
We have product X, how do we virally spread it?
... we ask:
We have viral loop X, what's the right product to put into it?
Once you have that question in mind, it becomes a lot easier to start brainstorming compelling experiences that might be inherently viral.
It might feel really weird to you to have this constraint. Why allow something like this to arbitrarily affect your product experience? Well, it's true that it's yet another constraint, but you are dealing with plenty of constraints already, like:
- Keeping things free (or making premium subscriptions)
- Making it web (versus hardware)
- Having it support some browsers (versus better ones people should be using)
- Keeping the site fast (rather than slow)
... and more. These are all things that motivate and constrain your product decisions, and adding (or substituting viral marketing) can be a very very smart idea to have a successful business rather than a successful product.
The skillset for effective viral marketing
Because of the above issues, "viral marketing" is not really something that ought to be in the domain of soft-skill folks like PR, advertising, and marketing people. Nor is it in the world of hardcore technical folks that can architect systems but not consumer interactions.
Instead, it's something that needs to bridge both soft and hard skills. You need an interesting combination of skills, including:
- Understanding the motivations behind user behaviors
- Understanding and exploiting the technical loopholes to create viral loops
I think that the fundamental compartmentalization of these two skillsets is what ultimately drives huge companies being worse at viral products than startups.

Andrew,
Awesome, awesome post. Couldn't agree with you more about your point re: inserting a product into a viral loop.
Things don't become viral because you make address book upload easy. It's got to be inherent and then you need to enable it.
Rahul
Posted by: Rahul Pathak | September 02, 2007 at 02:04 AM
Great post.
First, make a product that people WANT to tell their friends about. THAT is the hard part.
If you can manage that, rolling out features that facilitate this (and make it really viral) is easy.
If you have a product no one is passionate about, no amount of "tell a friend" links or social bookmarking icons is going to help.
Posted by: Tony Wright | September 02, 2007 at 01:36 PM
I've come to your post because I didn't know what viral marketing means. Now that I've read your article I realize there's a great value in it. I've always though about how can we promote our products to the users, but never though of it like this. What do people want to tell their friends about is a great place to start. I'm pretty sure I'll sleep on it for a while. Great article ;)
Posted by: sergiu | September 10, 2007 at 08:13 AM
Great post. I think Viral is the way to go these days.
Posted by: Wanda | January 08, 2008 at 08:42 AM
Andrew
Your post is very true and you are absolutely correct in saying this is to be done at the conception of the project.
At the research stage is best as you can see what viral tactics other products in your "niche" are using.
You have to tie your Viral Marketing Strategies to the first part of your action plan. Create the "BUZZ" and take your new product worldwide.
Viral marketing is an amazing method of generating traffic and leads but also acts as a great pre seller of products.
Posted by: Baz Scourfield | January 09, 2008 at 03:48 PM
I have known about viral marketing months ago but your post cleared to me some points that I did not understand well.
I suggest that the help of a
online marketing specialist, we will understand more of viral marketing and how to maximize it. We all want the best for our businesses and working with online marketing consultants,(a discussion about them here:http://www.online-marketingsolutions.com/Internet-Marketing-Specialist-pg3871.html) would definitely be worth spending money for, if needed.
Again, my gratitude for this informative post of yours.
Posted by: Kristine Buenavista | January 24, 2008 at 10:58 PM
I could not agree with you more! So many times companies think that this is a strategy, when it is really a result of doing something else. Going into your marketing campaign and saying "viral" 900 times will not get the job done. You can help the situation somewhat - but there is no method that is reproducible across every company\product\service.
Posted by: Eric | March 12, 2008 at 05:57 PM
so are you suggesting that viral marketing should never be considered as a marketing strategy after product development. cant we reengineer the product to go viral. if not a YouTube or FaceBook success story, will it not yield some modrate success?
Posted by: free press release | March 23, 2008 at 01:16 PM
The way I read this, you seem to be saying that "Viral marketing" is strictly a web phenomena.
Posted by: Dee | April 25, 2008 at 02:34 AM