Archive for Buzz Marketing Tips
Playing the Fame Card for Buzz
Posted by: | CommentsMost people love the idea of having a taste of fame, even if only for a short time, and Fame-by-Association is almost as exciting. You can harness this common desire in people and use it to drive traffic to your website in a lot of fascinating ways.
We’re going to share one “Make ‘em famous” trick to get some serious buzz for your brand.
Have you ever been in the right place at the right time and been interviewed by a local news anchor who just happened to be on the scene for some bit of breaking news? What did you do as soon as you got home? You called your friends and family and excitedly told them, “I’m going to be on the news!” Then you made SURE you were sitting in front of the TV when the news came on, even if it started at 4 pm, and you didn’t MOVE until you saw your mug on the screen at 6:24 pm, right before the weatherman gave his final wrap-up.
Afterward, the phone would ring with friends and family on the other end gleefully exclaiming, “I saw you on the news!” You’d laugh about how stupid you looked, how ridiculous you sounded, or how different the anchor looks in person. And you loved it.
Ahhh. Sweet fame, so fleeting.
The novel buzzmarketing idea we’re about to share with you takes its cue from the desire most of us have to get just a taste of fame. And if you have a video camera, a computer, business cards and a website, it’ll cost you less than $20.
Step One: Go to Zazzle.com or a similar personal designing website and design a simple T-shirt with a quirky, interesting slogan on it like “What Do The Neighbors Think?”, “Tricky Questions” or “Man On The Street.”
Put your website’s address on the T-shirt in a very large font. You want “observers” who gather around or walk by to remember your website!
Step Two: While you’re waiting for your T-shirt to arrive in the mail, start thinking of interesting questions to ask people on camera. Think of questions whose answers will either get people heated, excited, or puzzled, or questions that will make them laugh. Make them controversial, or questions that test their knowledge of current events. Most recently, for example, is the Lady GaGa phenomenon or the sudden appeal of vampire movies — those topics make for great questions, if you target your questions to your audience.
Step Three: Once you get your T-shirt in the mail, put it on and hit the streets for your “Fleeting Fame” participants. Take your video camera and business cards to a populated area like the town square, the local grocery store, or the mall. For the most bang for your buck, think of places where you know there will be people who would actually USE whatever you sell on your website. For example, if you sell medical supplies, don’t go to the mall on a Friday night and talk to teens if you want your buzzmarketing campaign to have the most payoff.
Step Four: With the video camera running, ask random people for permission to ask them a simple question. When you get their “Yeah, sure,” ask your pre-planned question and record their answer.
Tell each participant that they can log on to your website in the next couple of days to see the final video, and if they make the final cut, they’ll see themselves and others answering the same question. Give them two of your business cards, one for them and one for a friend. To cover your bases, have them sign a simple release form.
Step Five: As soon as you can, edit your video to get the best video clips, or just upload the whole thing to your website. Draw attention to the video by placing it next to a picture of you wearing your T-shirt, holding your video camera.
Put the video on your homepage, or embed it on a page that you think will drive sales. If you choose that route, place a colorful banner or link on your website’s homepage, and next to the picture of you wearing your snazzy new T-shirt.
Note: If you want to get even more exposure and you have the money, get extra T-shirts made, but this time with “I was on [insert name of your program]” — again, with your website address prominently featured.
Either give a T-shirt to everyone who answers a question on camera, or send them to the people who end up being featured on your website. They’ll wear those T-shirts with pride, because they want people to go to your website and see them “on camera.”
Step Six: Sit back and wait for the buzz — and hopefully, for all the potential clients you just gave a reason to visit your website.
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Michelle handles all Social Media for New England Multimedia. You can contact her by email, on our Facebook, or on our Twitter.









