Masterclass on Viral Video Marketing – Interview Excerpts

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Excited to be doing a Masterclass on Viral Video Marketing (DMA Asia) this week. The action packed session about the behind the scenes strategies which have been instrumental in making video marketing a growth hack for ixigo. From driving app installs to skyrocketing reach with videos.

Excerpts from the interview before the Masterclass ..

What role does ‘Viral Video Marketing’ play in ‘Content Marketing Strategy’?

For the success of any content marketing strategy, the distribution of content on social is super important. Organic reach on Facebook is non-existent, that’s how Facebook makes money off you. This is where ‘Viral Content’ can beat Facebook at it’s own game. To the point, the videos that we make at ixigo, our goal is to hit a million without any spends, entirely on the quality of content, supported by organic shares from the users. And content marketing to me is like a Rocketship in outer space, it needs daily fuel to keep going further (that’s your articles, memes etc.) and nuclear fuel once a while which takes it light years ahead (which would be that video or a killer infographic).

How do you conceptualise a video campaign? Is there any process or steps to follow?

For starters, I’ve stopped thinking in campaigns and focus on starting conversations instead. When a video starts conversations among users, then the magic starts to happen. We reject 95% video ideas in our brainstorming meetings just because they aren’t share-worthy. At the end it’s not about the views, but shares that we want, compelling, earned, organic shares. The steps to conceptualise is to start with topics which are either inspirational, solve users’ pain points, celebrate their life, and are topical or change the world in any way. Once our ideas fall into those buckets, it’s a go!

According to you, what are the essential elements of a successful Viral Video?

The first impression is very important, which is the thumbnail image of the video that shows up in the news-feeds of users. That first impression stops the user and compels him to take action. Then, comes the crucial ‘First 3-6 seconds’. That’s the second ‘first impression’. The goal for us is to stop a user in the news-feeds, engage him in the first 3-6 seconds, compel him to watch the whole thing and hit that ’share’ button. The bottom line is that the content must be excellent to begin with, a mediocre video can’t go viral just because you spend millions on it, which was the era of TV.

How do you ensure virality of the videos? What metrics do you use to track ROI?

Virality of any video starts with exceptional content, the idea. That’s 50% of the game. Rest is distribution. Without distribution, your best videos may die in a vault. And distribution is where the method comes in. The most important metric is ‘shares’ and subsequent reach. A video we made in January this year hits 40 million views in a week and got ixigo 20,000 app installs, all organic! When the shares and views hit big numbers, the ROI baby starts to dance.

Which are your favourite Indian viral video campaigns?

If you haven’t yet watched ixigo’s viral videos, check them out.

Which are the best online tools to create a video campaign?

At the end of the day, it ain’t about any fancy tools, but simple storytelling and understanding the user behaviour today. User attention span is super low and mobile use is on all time high, so the video must be fast and mobile native. First thing is to start on paper, and define the concept in shots. What comes first, what next. If you can do this, like obsess about this stage, then rest is easy. After this stage, shooting is easy (your phone or any DSLR), editing is easy (mac has iMovie which is free, or learn an editing software, it ain’t that difficult). If you’d ask any successful photographer about the camera to buy for great photos, he’ll tell you it’s not about the equipment, same applies here.

Viral Video Marketing is mostly taken as a B2C campaign. How can it help in achieving B2B objectives?

Last week, LinkedIn announced getting into videos, which in my opinion opens the floodgates of video content for B2B. Also, be it B2B, B2C or any term that you use to define your audience, at the end of the day it’s for people only. The same fundamentals apply here too, just that the focus is on business problem solving, inspiration, celebrating life or aligning with industry news. The only difference is the benchmarks to measure success. For a B2C hitting a million may be cool, but for B2B, even if you get a thousand views but your audience was CEOs, then it’s a hit in my opinion.


One more thing: I’ve been busy writing a book, compiling all the learnings from the trenches on viral marketing. Join the mailing list to be in the know :)

Video Marketing – Q & A

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One hour of crazy typing, awesome questions and a vibrant group. Prateek Shah organised a Video Marketing chat on Facebook recently, and the rapid fire questions made for a very energetic afternoon :) The event link is now an archive of sorts with questions and answers about video marketing. From review of a video, to best practices to ROI, we covered it all. Check it out

Few questions asked in the chat

Q: Are there platforms other than YouTube and Facebook, that brands should seriously focus on for promoting video content?

Q: What is the difference between video marketing and video blogging? Are they same? How can they be used in b2b business/lead generation?

Q: Can you share some key case studies which gives a great perspective on how a growing brand leaped ahead just by following a strong video marketing strategy.

Q: So I started this ecom startup and am on a very tight budget. How do I go start with DM to let the people know about everything. Get some sales and create awareness!

Q: We build multi author blog, we are trying to promote multi host video channel. What no of volumes we must aim at to promote the Expert?? (I mean how often videos should be released and total no of videos)

Q: How can we generate website traffic with the help of video content?
(It is for marketing of events not for a product)

Q: How do you measure the success of a video marketing campaign? What do you measure?

Q: Does having product videos on product page help more than exclusive videos on Youtube page for an e-commerce company?

Q: What are the best practices to control cost while promoting a brand through videos and to engage audience?

Q: I’ve made a video for my app marketing, according to all the rules and guru research. I made it very short, crispy, informative and what not. I still am struggling to understand why is my video not getting good response? Can you throw some light on it by quickly taking a look at it?

Q: At what stage one should focus on Video marketing in a startup. Should it be done parallel or keeping in view the kind of engagement it demands, done at a later stage. Sounds basic, but just in case your experience can throw some light on this.

Q: How to do marketing in youtube?

Q: Which is the best platform for video marketing? Facebook or Youtube?

Q: Does Instagram video marketing work in India?

Check out the answers :)

How a Video Got Reach of 25 Million – Case Study at #11MarCon

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Presented the ixigo case study at the IAMAI Marketing Conclave in Mumbai last week. What an exciting event, enthusiastic audience and an experience to remember. On Day 1, there was an interesting session on video marketing, with who’s who of the video marketing world defending their stands.

It was a revelation to learn that we’re doing two things very different from the industry:

  • we produce all videos in-house and
  • we don’t focus on influencers (the messengers), but focus on producing kick-ass content (message) for our social community instead.

On Day 2, had my little case study presentation. The story of how we pulled a reach of 25 million from a video, and the best practices in viral video marketing. The energy was infectious, the session went off script, rapid fire answers to interesting questions from the audience. Find the slide-deck from the event below, and tweets about it. 

Slide-deck : Case Study

Tweets from the event