7. How CXOs can make things go viral
Chanakya Joshi
GetAConnectGlobal.com | Founder, Content Funnels Tech. Pvt. Ltd. | Content Marketing 2.0 | Customized & Connected Content Funnels | Your Online Presence Sorted | IIMI | Suzuki | M&M | HCL | SLP
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As a CXO, you are supposed to promote something or the other. Be it products/services you deliver, ideas you want to implement, or behaviors you want your teams to follow.
The traditional way to promote things is advertisement (Ads).
People still spend a lot of money on Ads but Ads are too salesy. They don't appeal to people because people don't like to be sold to.
Then what is the alternative to these 'pushy' ads?
Word of Mouth (WoM). Yes, WoM or a referral is much more powerful than pushy Ads.
But the problem is how to make 'WoM' work for you?
While we all like things going viral, we really don't know what goes viral and what doesn't.
All this was true until this book 'Contagious : Why things catch on' was not released.
In this book, author Jonah Berger, a Wharton School professor and internationally bestselling author, with a lot of research has jotted down steps (called as STEPPS) which if followed, can make anything go viral.
STEPPS Concept : Products/Ideas/Behaviors that contain Social Currency and are Triggered, Emotional, Public, Practically Valuable, and wrapped into Stories, normally become Viral.
Note : STEPPS is an acronym coined by Jonah Berger for Social Currency, Triggers, Emotional, Public, Practical Value, Stories.
The good point is, you don't have to follow all the STEPPS to make your specific thing go viral, any one or two of them, done well, would do.
Let's understand these STEPPS one by one :
Here is my understanding and my own way of looking at STEPPS Framework in a business context.
Treat this as my notes on the STEPPS Framework by Jonah Berger.
1. Social Currency :
Does it (your product/service/idea/behavior which you want to make viral) make them look good or an insider?
2. Triggers :
Consider the context. What cues make people think about your product or idea? How can you grow the habitat and make it come to mind more often?
Caution : Linking a product or idea with a stimulus that is already associated with many things isn’t as effective as forging a fresher, more original linkage.
3. Emotions :
Focus on feelings. Does talking about your product or idea generate emotion? How can you kindle the fire?
Emotions drive people to action. They make us laugh, shout, and cry, and they make us talk,?share,?and?buy.
Caution : Sad Emotions, Contentment = Deactivated/Reduced sharing.
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4. Public :
Does your product or idea advertise itself? Can people see when others are using it? If not, how can you make the private 'public'? Can you create behavioral residue that sticks around even after people use it?
Caution : There are few instances when making something 'public' could be a bad idea : e.g. JUST SAY NO Campaign about drugs : When we campaign that drugs are bad and don't do it, we also say that other people are doing them which actually makes people do it. Preventing a behavior requires the opposite.
5. Practical Value :
Does talking about your product or idea help people help others? How can you highlight incredible value, packaging your knowledge and expertise into useful information others will want to disseminate?
6. Stories :
What is your Trojan Horse? Is your product or idea embedded in a broader narrative that people want to share? Is the story not only viral, but also valuable?
Stories are important because people don’t think in terms of information. They think in terms of narratives. You need to provide a quick and easy way for people to acquire a lot of knowledge in a vivid and engaging fashion. (e.g. story told by one customer about how he got a refund will be itched in memory for a long time, rather than the refund policy)
Some awesome behavioral principles I learnt from this book :
These are my learnings from the awesome book 'Contagious : Why things catch on' by Jonah Berger.
I hope this is helpful.
In the next edition, we will deep dive in the last step of the STEPPS, Stories. We will go further to Storytelling and discuss more about it.
Storytelling is particularly a much talked about topic and we all are already immersed in stories of brands all around us. In fact storytelling can be applied to all the first five steps of the STEPPS Framework.
Let's understand how we can use that 'storytelling' better for our own brands/business in the next edition.
Regards,
Chanakya Joshi
Founder & CEO,
References :
Jonah Berger - Talks at Google :
Jonah Berger - Official website :