Tag Archive for 'brand'

Is successful viral video always good marketing?

“Yes, I’m looking for a new notebook – high def screen, lots of memory and something I can catch with my butt.”

With over a million views on YouTube, this video has definitely gone viral. It’s well done and it’s not easy to tell how they faked it so that alone gives it a lot of viral juice. The matching spandex suits are also a nice touch.

Would I recommend this style of viral video to a client?  No.  Here’s why:

Little, to no brand presence.
I’ve never heard of MSI before – now I have, but only because I actually took the time to follow the link at the end of the video. I would be surprised if one in a thousand people bother. The link sends you to http://xslimvideoevent.msi.com – which is a video contest sub-site for MSI. Considering the 24 video entries on this site are averaging about 300 views each I don’t imagine many of the million- plus YouTube viewers are taking the time to investigate. Would many people understand what www.msi-xseries.com means without doing some research. I doubt it – it’s too subtle. I have to admit I enjoy the ‘viral video producers ethic’ that says it’s OK to show people catching your product with their buttucks but don’t you dare offend viewers by making a viral (intended) video too commercial!

What, if anything, do you assoicate with the brand?
Spandex suits and guys catching laptops with their butts. At some point you have to take a pass on crazy concepts… don’t you? Or is any concept a good one as long as people watch the video?

It’s been done.
Guy catches sunglasses with face was done last year to promote Ray-bans and received over 4 million views. It was fairly original when it was released and it caused a lot of buzz at the time. As soon as someone does something that is successful on YouTube everyone comes out with variations on that theme. There should be a reasonable limit to the number of commercial objects that can be caught with different body parts.

Most (99.9%) of videos that are intended to be viral aren’t. This one is. But just because it happened to go viral doesn’t mean it added any appreciable value to the company that sponsored it. Of course the gonzo marketers will argue that making a million people aware of your product – however marginally - is worth it, regardless of the method, subject matter or consequence.

As a friend put it, maybe these guys were just going for a different type of viral.

Share This
  • email
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr

Intel video rocks!… and then doesn’t

Intel hits it out of the park with the first video. It’s cool. it’s clever, it’s funny… it rocks. Good for Intel (and their agency).

It is extremely difficult to reposition your brand. The market decides who you are, what you represent and it takes a tremendous amount of effort to change those perceptions. Whatever you may have thought of Intel before, this first video does a great job of 1) Telling the world that Intel is filled with a whack of very smart people – no surprise there, but still a good reminder and 2) Positioning Intel as a pretty cool company.

And then there’s  the second video…

Here’s the thing – if you want to be cool, you have to be cool consistently. (i.e. Apple).  You can rationalize how unrelated the two videos are but they both use the same theme – rock music – to promote the company and they coexist on the same YouTube Channel, obviously intended for a general audience.

So which one represents the real Intel?

Share This
  • email
  • Print
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr