Poker Anyone?

Click here view Larry Lawhead's MySpace.

It's exciting to participate in communities that have found their stride on the net.

Lots of start-ups incorporated similar approaches into their business plans back in the .com boom days, but failed to hit the popularity and unbelievable saturation of today's giants like YouTube, MySpace, Friendster and FaceBook. There are also some interesting communities springing up centering on geographic or ethnic audiences such as MiGente.com (Latinos) and BlackPlanet.com (African-Americans).

No serious marketing department can ignore these communities. There are millions of users participating in these "web-communes"?. The audience is huge and the potential gain of properly communicating to them is even bigger. By following a few simple rules, some companies have become very popular. Cillit Bang didn't get upset when their advertisement got "re-mixed"? and posted. Bawls Energy drink had their online store in place, when their beverage was purchased by a gamer who in turn recommended it to the gaming community on his popular blog. The movie Snakes on a Plane was born out of the phenomena we call viral.

Marketing virally requires a huge amount of trust that flows in two directions. The supplier must trust the "audience"?. Relinquishing control of the product's marketing ideology, and reputation to the consumer is the basic idea. Trust from the audience is gained by showing respect toward the community's "code of conduct"?. The key word here is respect.

Marketing products to "dumb"? audiences, who must be told what they want, is passé. Consumers are no longer dumb, they are formidable opponents. The net has opened the doors to unfathomable amounts of information available to anyone who has a connection. This means people are better informed and more confident than the stereotype of a shopper at the supermarket. There is power in numbers. Perceptions for or against products are formed by consensus.

TV viewing time is spent surfing the web. TV News and classic reporting is replaced with reading blogs. TV movies and sitcoms are replaced with watching short videos like an elderly English man tell tales about his life experiences on YouTube. The English daily "The Guardian"? recently complained that more people would be watching this man on YouTube than reading their paper. This is "really-reality-TV"? based on openness, passion and honesty. Letting go of a companies marketing ideology, and product reputation is the key component to entering the high stakes game of viral marketing. This is not for the faint of heart, but the rewards are enormous and easily attainable if done right.

Social Networking Overview

Wikipedia article on Social Networking

Networking Websites

Wikipedia list of social networking locations

Additional Resources

Wikipedia article on Viral Marketing

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They Say

His (Larry's) assistance in administrating the team effort and analytical work was
of the highest caliber. In addition, his contributions to the development effort
were an integral part of the project's success...

Dwight - Director of eCommerce

Larry proved to be "solutions" oriented. On several occasions, Larry identified
obstacles in the path of our goal to deploy an eCommerce solution and diligently
and independently worked with software vendors and consultants to find solutions.

Mike - Director of eCommerce Strategy

Larry is an innovative self-starter, who rarely needs supervision. He typically
exceeds expectations and enjoys the challenges associated with installing new
technology... Larry is an invaluable asset to any Information Technology team and I
highly recommend him.

Bob - Partner, Retired KPMG LLC

I've found his e-commerce analysis documents (flowcharts, diagrams, etc.) and use
cases thorough and clear. Larry was very conscientious and also has the invaluable
ability to communicate and work well with both users and developers.

Ward - Software Engineer

His documents were all very concise, even though the work he was documenting was
often difficult to describe, even to the developers... We often wished we "had
Larry" on other projects that were getting hard to control.

Dave - Software & Database Developer

His documentation is beyond compare in it's detail, accuracy and ease of reference.
His thorough documentation and notes brought calm to the chaos on many an
occasion... He is a self-starter and worked many a late night to ensure the project
stayed on course. I would love to work with Larry again.

Tom - Sr. Software Developer