Akademik

viral marketing
(VY.rul mark.uh.ting)
n.
The promotion of a service or product by using existing customers to pass along a marketing pitch to friends, family, and colleagues.
Example Citation:
The best viral marketing is not just word-of-mouth, as some people carelessly assume. Nor is it multi-level marketing, where Juan sells to Alice and then gets a cut of whatever Alice sells to Fred. It is when users actively recruit other users, not for pay, but because they benefit from a larger user pool, just as virus DNA benefits from the spread of a virus.
— Esther Dyson, "Second Sight: Melissa is a marketing tool," The Guardian (London, England), April 8, 1999
Earliest Citation:
At Ernst & Whinney, when Macgregor initially put Macintosh SEs up against a set of Compaqs, the staff almost unanimously voted with their feet as long waiting lists developed for use of the Macintoshes. The Compaqs were all but idle. John Bownes of City Bank confirmed this. "It's viral marketing. You get one or two in and they spread throughout the company."
— Tim Carrigan, "New Apples tempt business," PC User, September 27, 1989
Notes:
Why "viral" marketing? Probably because a biological virus replicates itself by invading a host cell and then using the cell's machinery to create new copies of the virus. So, analogously, a customer acts like a kind of "host cell" for a company's marketing message, and that customer is used to create new "copies" of the viral marketing message.
Related Words:
advergame
alpha pup
drip marketing
downlines
multilevel marketing
murketing
permission marketing
put-pocketing
roach bait
undercover marketing
word of post
zip code marketing
Category:
Marketing

New words. 2013.