Internet-induced marketing techniques: Critical factors in viral marketing campaigns

M. Woerndl,S. Papagiannidis,M. Bourlakis,Feng Li

Published 2008 in International Journal of Business Science and Applied Management

ABSTRACT

The rapid diffusion of the Internet and the emergence of various social constructs facilitated by Internet technologies are changing the drivers that define how marketing techniques are developed and refined. This paper identifies critical factors for viral marketing, an Internet-based 'word-of-mouth' marketing technique. Based on existing knowledge, five types of viral marketing factors that may critically influence the success of viral marketing campaigns are identified. These factors are the overall structure of the campaign, the characteristics of the product or service, the content of the message, the characteristics of the diffusion and, the peer-to-peer information conduit. The paper discusses three examples of viral marketing campaigns and identifies the specific factors in each case that influence its success. The paper concludes with a viral marketing typology differentiating between viral marketing communications, unintended viral marketing and commercial viral marketing. This is still a rapidly evolving area and further research is clearly needed to monitor new developments and make sense of the radical changes these developments bring to the market.

PUBLICATION RECORD

  • Publication year

    2008

  • Venue

    International Journal of Business Science and Applied Management

  • Publication date

    Unknown publication date

  • Fields of study

    Business, Computer Science

  • Identifiers
  • External record

    Open on Semantic Scholar

  • Source metadata

    Semantic Scholar

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