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A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing

Assessing its impact as well as its volume will help companies take better advantage of buzz.

A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing article, how to measure measuring buzz, Marketing & Sales

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Consumers have always valued opinions expressed directly to them. Marketers may spend millions of dollars on elaborately conceived advertising campaigns, yet often what really makes up a consumer’s mind is not only simple but also free: a word-of-mouth recommendation from a trusted source. As consumers overwhelmed by product choices tune out the ever-growing barrage of traditional marketing, word of mouth cuts through the noise quickly and effectively.

Indeed, word of mouth1 is the primary factor behind 20 to 50 percent of all purchasing decisions. Its influence is greatest when consumers are buying a product for the first time or when products are relatively expensive, factors that tend to make people conduct more research, seek more opinions, and deliberate longer than they otherwise would. And its influence will probably grow: the digital revolution has amplified and accelerated its reach to the point where word of mouth is no longer an act of intimate, one-on-one communication. Today, it also operates on a one-to-many basis: product reviews are posted online and opinions disseminated through social networks. Some customers even create Web sites or blogs to praise or punish brands.

As online communities increase in size, number, and character, marketers have come to recognize word of mouth’s growing importance. But measuring and managing it is far from easy. We believe that word of mouth can be dissected to understand exactly what makes it effective and that its impact can be measured using what we call “word-of-mouth equity”—an index of a brand’s power to generate messages that influence the consumer’s decision to purchase. Understanding how and why messages work allows marketers to craft a coordinated, consistent response that reaches the right people with the right content in the right setting. That generates an exponentially greater impact on the products consumers recommend, buy, and become loyal to.

A consumer-driven world

The sheer volume of information available today has dramatically altered the balance of power between companies and consumers. As consumers have become overloaded, they have become increasingly skeptical about traditional company-driven advertising and marketing and increasingly prefer to make purchasing decisions largely independent of what companies tell them about products.

This tectonic power shift toward consumers reflects the way people now make purchasing decisions.2 Once consumers make a decision to buy a product, they start with an initial consideration set of brands formed through product experience, recommendations, or awareness-building marketing. Those brands, and others, are actively evaluated as consumers gather product information from a variety of sources and decide which brand to purchase. Their postsales experience then informs their next purchasing decision. While word of mouth has different degrees of influence on consumers at each stage of this journey (Exhibit 1), it’s the only factor that ranks among the three biggest consumer influencers at every step.

It’s also the most disruptive factor. Word of mouth can prompt a consumer to consider a brand or product in a way that incremental advertising spending simply cannot. It’s also not a one-hit wonder. The right messages resonate and expand within interested networks, affecting brand perceptions, purchase rates, and market share. The rise of online communities and communication has dramatically increased the potential for significant and far-reaching momentum effects. In the mobile-phone market, for example, we have observed that the pass-on rates for key positive and negative messages can increase a company’s market share by as much as 10 percent or reduce it by 20 percent over a two-year period, all other things being equal. This effect alone makes a case for more systematically investigating and managing word of mouth.

Understanding word of mouth

While word of mouth is undeniably complex and has a multitude of potential origins and motivations, we have identified three forms of word of mouth that marketers should understand: experiential, consequential, and intentional.

Experiential

Experiential word of mouth is the most common and powerful form, typically accounting for 50 to 80 percent of word-of-mouth activity in any given product category. It results from a consumer’s direct experience with a product or service, largely when that experience deviates from what’s expected. (Consumers rarely complain about or praise a company when they receive what they expect.) Complaints when airlines lose luggage are a classic example of experiential word of mouth, which adversely affects brand sentiment and, ultimately, equity, reducing both receptiveness to traditional marketing and the effect of positive word of mouth from other sources. Positive word of mouth, on the other hand, can generate a tailwind for a product or service.

Consequential

Marketing activities also can trigger word of mouth. The most common is what we call consequential word of mouth, which occurs when consumers directly exposed to traditional marketing campaigns pass on messages about them or brands they publicize. The impact of those messages on consumers is often stronger than the direct effect of advertisements, because marketing campaigns that trigger positive word of mouth have comparatively higher campaign reach and influence. Marketers need to consider both the direct and the pass-on effects of word of mouth when determining the message and media mix that maximizes the return on their investments.

Intentional

A less common form of word of mouth is intentional—for example, when marketers use celebrity endorsements to trigger positive buzz for product launches. Few companies invest in generating intentional word of mouth, partly because its effects are difficult to measure and because many marketers are unsure if they can successfully execute intentional word-of-mouth campaigns.

What marketers need for all three forms of word of mouth is a way to understand and measure its impact and financial ramifications, both good and bad.

Word-of-mouth equity

A starting point has been to count the number of recommendations and dissuasions for a given product. There’s an appealing power and simplicity to this approach, but also a challenge: it’s difficult for marketers to account for variability in the power of different kinds of word-of-mouth messages. After all, a consumer is significantly more likely to buy a product as a result of a recommendation made by a family member than by a stranger. These two kinds of recommendations constitute a single message, yet the difference in their impact on the receiver’s behavior is immense. In fact, our research shows that a high-impact recommendation—from a trusted friend conveying a relevant message, for example—is up to 50 times more likely to trigger a purchase than is a low-impact recommendation.

To assess the impact of these different kinds of recommendations, we developed a way to calculate what we call word-of-mouth equity. It represents the average sales impact of a brand message multiplied by the number of word-of-mouth messages. By looking at the impact—as well as the volume—of these messages, this metric lets a marketer accurately test their effect on sales and market share for brands, individual campaigns, and companies as a whole (Exhibit 2). That impact—in other words, the ability of any one word-of-mouth recommendation or dissuasion to change behavior—reflects what is said, who says it, and where it is said. It also varies by product category.

What’s said is the primary driver of word-of-mouth impact. Across most product categories, we found that the content of a message must address important product or service features if it is to influence consumer decisions. In the mobile-phone category, for example, design is more important than battery life. In skin care, packaging and ingredients create more powerful word of mouth than do emotional messages about how a product makes people feel. Marketers tend to build campaigns around emotional positioning, yet we found that consumers actually tend to talk—and generate buzz—about functional messages.

The second critical driver is the identity of the person who sends a message: the word-of-mouth receiver must trust the sender and believe that he or she really knows the product or service in question. Our research does not identify a homogenous group of consumers who are influential across categories: consumers who know cars might influence car buyers but not consumers shopping for beauty products. About 8 to 10 percent of consumers are what we call influentials, whose common factor is trust and competence. Influentials typically generate three times more word-of-mouth messages than noninfluentials do, and each message has four times more impact on a recipient’s purchasing decision. About 1 percent of these people are digital influentials—most notably, bloggers—with disproportionate power.

Finally, the environment where word of mouth circulates is crucial to the power of messages. Typically, messages passed within tight, trusted networks have less reach but greater impact than those circulated through dispersed communities—in part, because there’s usually a high correlation between people whose opinions we trust and the members of networks we most value. That’s why old-fashioned kitchen table recommendations and their online equivalents remain so important. After all, a person with 300 friends on Facebook may happily ignore the advice of 290 of them. It’s the small, close-knit network of trusted friends that has the real influence.

Word-of-mouth equity empowers companies by allowing them to understand word of mouth’s relative impact on brand and product performance. While marketers have always known that the impact can be significant, they may be surprised to learn just how powerful it really is. When Apple’s iPhone was launched in Germany, for example, its share of word-of-mouth volume in the mobile-phone category—or how many consumers were talking about it—was about 10 percent, or a third less than that of the market leader. Yet the iPhone had launched in other countries, and the buzz accompanying those messages in Germany was about five times more powerful than average. This meant the iPhone’s word-of-mouth equity score was 30 percent higher than that of the market leader, with three times more influentials recommending the iPhone over leading handsets. As a result, sales directly attributable to the positive word of mouth surrounding the iPhone outstripped those attributable to Apple’s paid marketing sixfold. Within 24 months of launch, the iPhone was selling almost one million units a year in Germany.

The flexibility of word-of-mouth equity allows us to gauge the word-of-mouth impact of companies, products, and brands regardless of the category or industry. And because it measures performance rather than the sheer volume of messages, it can be used to identify what’s driving—and hurting—word-of-mouth impact. Both insights are critical if marketers are to convert knowledge into power.

Harnessing word of mouth

The rewards of pursuing excellence in word-of-mouth marketing are huge, and it can deliver a sustainable and significant competitive edge few other marketing approaches can match. Yet many marketers avoid it. Some worry that it remains immature as a marketing discipline compared with the highly sophisticated management of marketing in media such as television and newspapers. Others are concerned that they can’t draw on extensive data or elaborate marketing tools fine-tuned over decades. For those unsure about actively managing word of mouth, consider this: the incremental gain from outperforming competitors with superior television ads, for example, is relatively small. That’s because all companies actively manage their traditional marketing activities and all have similar knowledge. With so few companies actively managing word of mouth—the most powerful form of marketing—the potential upside is exponentially greater.

The starting point for managing word of mouth is understanding which dimensions of word-of-mouth equity are most important to a product category: the who, the what, or the where. In skincare, for example, it’s the what; in retail banks, the who. Word-of-mouth-equity analysis can detail the precise nature of a category’s influentials and pinpoint the highest-impact messages, contexts, and networks. Equipped with these insights, companies can then work on generating positive word of mouth, using the three forms we identified: experiential, consequential, and intentional.

Although the importance of these triggers varies category by category, experiential sources are the most important across them. Harnessing experiential word of mouth is fundamentally about providing customers with the opportunity to share positive experiences and making the story relatable and relevant to the audience. Some companies, such as Miele and Lego, build buzz around products before launch and work to have early, highly influential adopters by involving consumers in product development, supported by online communities. Consistently refreshing the product experience also helps harness experiential word of mouth—consumers are more likely to talk about a product early in its life cycle, which is why product launches or enhancements are so crucial to generating positive word of mouth. Buzz also can be sustained after launch: Apple has maintained interest in and excitement about the iPhone via its apps store, as constantly evolving and user-generated content maintains positive word of mouth.

Most companies actively use customer satisfaction insights when developing new products and services. Yet a satisfied customer base may not be enough to create buzz. To create positive word of mouth that actually has impact, the customer experience must not only deviate significantly from expectations but also deviate on the dimensions that matter to the customer and that he or she is likely to talk about. For instance, while battery life is a crucial driver of satisfaction for mobile-handset consumers, they talk about it less than other product features, such as design and usability. To turn consumers into an effective marketing vehicle, companies need to outperform on product and service attributes that have intrinsic word-of-mouth potential.

Managing consequential word of mouth involves using the insights provided by word-of-mouth equity to maximize the return on marketing activities. By understanding the word-of-mouth effects of the range of channels and messages employed and allocating marketing activities accordingly, companies can equip consumers to spread marketing messages and drive their reach and impact. In fact, McKinsey research shows that marketing-induced consumer-to-consumer word of mouth generates more than twice the sales of paid advertising in categories as diverse as skincare and mobile phones.

Two things supercharge the creation of positive consequential word of mouth: interactivity and creativity. They are interrelated, and particularly important for brands in relatively low-innovation categories that often struggle to gain consumer attention. One example of a company successfully harnessing this power is the UK confectioner Cadbury, whose “Glass and a Half Full” advertising campaign used creative, thoughtful, and integrated online and traditional marketing to spur consumer interaction and sales.

The campaign began with a television commercial featuring a gorilla playing drums to an iconic Phil Collins song. The bizarre juxtaposition was an immediate hit. The concept so engaged consumers that they were willing to go online, view the commercial, and create amateur versions of their own, triggering a torrent of YouTube imitations. Within three months of the advertisement’s appearance, the video had been viewed more than six million times online, year-on-year sales of Cadbury’s Dairy Milk chocolate had increased by more than 9 percent, and the brand’s positive perception among consumers had improved by about 20 percent.

Intentional word-of-mouth campaigns revolve around identifying influentials who become brand and product advocates. Of course, companies can’t precisely control what consumers tell others. But ambitious marketers can use word-of-mouth equity insights to shift from consequential to intentional campaigning.

The type of campaign that companies choose to adopt depends on the degree to which marketers can find and target influentials. Marketers capable of undertaking one-to-one marketing—such as mobile-phone operators—are uniquely positioned to execute controlled and effective intentional word-of-mouth campaigns. Mobile carriers have granular customer data that can precisely locate influentials who know the category, talk to many people, and provide them with trusted opinions. That means messages can be directed at specific individuals who are most likely to spread positive word of mouth through their social networks. As a message spreads, this approach generates an exponential word-of-mouth impact, similar to the ripple effect when a pebble is dropped in a pond.

Companies unable to target influentials precisely must take a different approach. While Red Bull, for example, can’t send text messages to specific consumers, it has successfully deployed science to orchestrate effective intentional word-of-mouth campaigns. After identifying influentials among its different target segments, the energy-drink company ensures that celebrities and other opinion makers seed the right messages among consumers, often through events. While it can’t be sure who will attend, Red Bull knows that those who do will be the kinds of consumers it seeks—and that the positive messages they will relay across their own social networks can generate a superior return for its marketing investment.

Marketers have always been aware of the effect of word of mouth, and there is clearly an art to effective word-of-mouth campaigning. Yet the science behind word-of-mouth equity helps reveal how to hone and deploy that art: it shows which messages consumers are likely to pass on and the impact of those messages, allowing marketers to estimate the tangible effect word of mouth has on brand equity and sales. These insights are essential for companies that want to harness the potential of word of mouth and to realize higher returns on their marketing investments.

About the Authors

Jacques Bughin is a director in McKinsey’s Brussels office, Jonathan Doogan is an associate principal in the London office, and Ole Jørgen Vetvik is a principal in the Oslo office.

Notes

1 The term word of mouth, as used in this article, means consumer-to-consumer communication with no economic incentives. The sender may, however, reap social gratification or rewards.

2 See David Court, Dave Elzinga, Susan Mulder, and Ole Jørgen Vetvik, “The consumer decision journey,” mckinseyquarterly.com, June 2009.

Recommend (267)
  • 29 JANUARY 2011
    Manish Verma
    Student
    CIMP
    Patna India

    Valuable insights. Though it is a well known fact that WOM/Testimonials play vital roles in the buying decision process, it is surprising to know the quantified impact.

    .
    Manish Verma
    Student
    CIMP
    Patna India

    Valuable insights. Though it is a well known fact that WOM/Testimonials play vital roles in the buying decision process, it is surprising to know the quantified impact.

    .
  • 6 JANUARY 2011
    Jatin Malik
    Audit
    KPMG
    India

    I think that WOM is more effective for launching new products than for established ones....

    .
    Jatin Malik
    Audit
    KPMG
    India

    I think that WOM is more effective for launching new products than for established ones. To know the utility of any product or service, a consumer looks for a benchmark. A benchmark comes from the last or previous experiences with the same or similar product. In the case of a new product, the consumer relies on statements or advice from the source he trusts and who has experienced the product or service. That is where WOM comes in.

    .
  • 3 JANUARY 2011
    Alan Bell
    Regional Manager
    Referral Institute
    Dublin, Ireland

    ...How to leverage the power of really focussed relationships, strategically identified and developed, and with only small numbers of the right people, is where the long-term success of WOM and referrals lies...

    .
    Alan Bell
    Regional Manager
    Referral Institute
    Dublin, Ireland

    An addition to this article if I may, which I feel focuses more on large businesses than SME’s; you say near the end that ‘messages passed within tight, trusted networks have less reach but greater impact than those circulated through dispersed communities’. Absolutely! (Although in my experience the ‘reach’ can be very extensive here also.) How to leverage the power of really focussed relationships, strategically identified and developed, and with only small numbers of the right people, is where the long-term success of WOM and referrals lies—particularly for small businesses. And beware ‘speed-networking’!

    .
  • 1 JANUARY 2011
    Shankar Biswas
    head of marketing
    FALCOM financial services
    Saudi Arabia

    ...We must be wary, however, that too much information in any case leads to consumer ennui—the excitement of exploring the unknown is taken away by all this....

    .
    Shankar Biswas
    head of marketing
    FALCOM financial services
    Saudi Arabia

    Marketing is an evolving science, the more vehicles the more talk. Whether it’s a movie or a brand’s reputation, a marketer can engineer the spreading of a story using the right stimulus and the right vehicles. We must be wary, however, that too much information in any case leads to consumer ennui—the excitement of exploring the unknown is taken away by all this.

    Word of mouth can be really make the process less engaging and more boring in the name of empowerment. Whose mouth is it, anyway?

    .
  • 30 DECEMBER 2010
    Karandeep Singh
    Sr. Research Analyst
    WNS Global Services
    Gurgaon India

    ...can we actually make WOM more effective by distributing it evenly through experimental, influential, and sequential usage?

    .
    Karandeep Singh
    Sr. Research Analyst
    WNS Global Services
    Gurgaon India

    An interesting article summarizing today’s best-used brand propogation measure. What would be interesting to know is, can we actually make WOM more effective by distributing it evenly through experimental, influential, and sequential usage?

    .
  • 29 DECEMBER 2010
    Craig Ziemkiewicz
    Sr. Brand Manager
    Daisy Brand
    Dallas, TX USA

    Is the data on Exhibit I self reported information from consumers? If so, I wonder how accurately consumers can describe their influences throughout the consumer decision journey....

    .
    Craig Ziemkiewicz
    Sr. Brand Manager
    Daisy Brand
    Dallas, TX USA

    Is the data on Exhibit I self reported information from consumers? If so, I wonder how accurately consumers can describe their influences throughout the consumer decision journey. It would be great to know more details on this part of the research.

    .
  • 29 DECEMBER 2010
    Russ Ouellette
    Managing Partner
    Sojourn Partners
    Bedford, NH USA

    ...New relationships refer more than older relationships. There is power in the fresh new relationship because people are trying to bridge....

    .
    Russ Ouellette
    Managing Partner
    Sojourn Partners
    Bedford, NH USA

    Excellent work. New relationships refer more than older relationships. There is power in the fresh new relationship because people are trying to bridge. My dissertation proved this, If you want to read, let me know and I’ll send you a copy.

    .
  • 14 DECEMBER 2010
    Leigh Goodwin
    Consultant
    Goodwin Consulting
    USA

    Word of mouth is used extensively in real estate–related marketing.

    .
    Leigh Goodwin
    Consultant
    Goodwin Consulting
    USA

    Word of mouth is used extensively in real estate–related marketing.

    .
  • 7 OCTOBER 2010
    Radhika Shastry
    Managing Director
    RCI India
    Bangalore - India

    In my experience, I have seen WOM being used extremely successfully in timeshare sales and marketing in India by a leading brand....

    .
    Radhika Shastry
    Managing Director
    RCI India
    Bangalore - India

    In my experience, I have seen WOM being used extremely successfully in timeshare sales and marketing in India by a leading brand. Happy customers can be used most effectively as surrogate sales people to increase market share and also to build equity.

    .
  • 4 SEPTEMBER 2010
    Kulwinder Singh
    Chief Marketing Officer
    VenSat
    Hyderabad, India

    First of all thanks for sharing this perspective. Secondly, any successful and practical marketer would agree with your points on assessing and re-planing word of mouth marketing.

    The grapevine is a powerful method of communication. I mean word-of-mouth - what...

    .
    Kulwinder Singh
    Chief Marketing Officer
    VenSat
    Hyderabad, India

    First of all thanks for sharing this perspective. Secondly, any successful and practical marketer would agree with your points on assessing and re-planing word of mouth marketing.

    The grapevine is a powerful method of communication. I mean word-of-mouth - what people say about your business. In fact, it could make or break your business. After all, you could have the best marketing campaigns in the world but if your customers aren’t saying good things about you, it doesn’t matter. And that makes it imperative for a marketer to gauge and implement corrective strategies. Also, Word of mouth marketing is a single point of failure for any marketing strategy. But word of mouth has found a new home on social media networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and LinkedIn to name but four.

    .
  • 19 JULY 2010
    Dr. P L Narasimhan
    Retred Vice President
    Chennai, India

    Word of Mouth has greater impact on purchases in durable and capital goods....

    .
    Dr. P L Narasimhan
    Retred Vice President
    Chennai, India

    Word of Mouth has greater impact on purchases in durable and capital goods. The time interval between the purchses is long and the investment is costly, and hence the new purchaser does not want to have a regret in the purchase and he relies more on word of mouth. Hence the company should watch the existing users and get feedback from them as an important strategy in their sales promotion.

    .
  • 16 JULY 2010
    M Shajimon
    Senior Relationship Manager-FI
    Commercial Bank of Dubai
    Dubai, UAE

    WOM should be encouraged within the organization as a tool of marketing and staff engagement....

    .
    M Shajimon
    Senior Relationship Manager-FI
    Commercial Bank of Dubai
    Dubai, UAE

    WOM should be encouraged within the organization as a tool of marketing and staff engagement. Whenever there is a positive argument/opportunity—for instance, the institution has won an award, reported good results, introduced a new product, etcetera—these should be used by the staff members among their contacts to spread news about your own institution, I am sure this will help in building brand name for your institution.

    .
  • 13 JULY 2010
    Nicolette Wuring
    Partner
    CCA
    Amsterdam, Netherlands

    Gentlemen, thank you for this great article written from the marketing angle. What I do miss is the organizational angle, which is quite crucial when you want to be successful in creating positive WoM....

    .
    Nicolette Wuring
    Partner
    CCA
    Amsterdam, Netherlands

    Gentlemen, thank you for this great article written from the marketing angle. What I do miss is the organizational angle, which is quite crucial when you want to be successful in creating positive WoM.

    I can recommend the HBR article (issue Jan/Febr 2010) “Rethinking Marketing”. It’s also the perspective I wrote my book “Customer Advocacy: When You Care, People Notice” from.

    .
  • 12 JULY 2010
    Alan McClure
    President
    Blue Water Consulting
    Leawood, KS USA

    To Sarah Owen: Sarah, I think you’d have to use some sort of causal modeling to best figure out the relationship of WOMM to revenue changes....

    .
    Alan McClure
    President
    Blue Water Consulting
    Leawood, KS USA

    To Sarah Owen: Sarah, I think you’d have to use some sort of causal modeling to best figure out the relationship of WOMM to revenue changes. Depending on the context, there is very likely a long lag time between WOM impacting a consumer target and that impact resulting in revenue changes. If you look for it in the near term, or only have one case to measure, you may well miss the cause/effect relationship.

    .
  • 17 JUNE 2010
    John Varcoe
    Director
    Everything
    Auckland, New Zealand

    ...It may seem counterintuitive to some, but the firms with the most loyal customers (and therefore the most likely customers to engage in WOM activity) rarely have the largest market shares....

    .
    John Varcoe
    Director
    Everything
    Auckland, New Zealand

    I note the comments re: Harley. But a Harley’s not a typical FMCG or run-of-the-mill consumer service. It may seem counterintuitive to some, but the firms with the most loyal customers (and therefore the most likely customers to engage in WOM activity) rarely have the largest market shares. That’s a key point for all marketers to note.

    Typically these firms represent smaller, exclusive groups—Harley Davidson owners being a good case in point, as are Edith Piaf fans. It is logical that as the size of a customer base increases, the associated loyalty declines to the norm.

    If well-managed WOM works for the likes of Harley, it is not necessarily also proof it’s also going to work for most other brands. When did you last seek guidance from experts or friends regarding your choice of toilet paper, baking soda, or laundry detergent, dare I ask?

    .
  • 18 MAY 2010
    Anil Pandey
    Sales
    HDFC AMC Ltd.
    Bhagalpur, India

    WOM can be used very effectively for financial products like mutual fund schemes and insurance products in a country like India where there is very less financial literacy and investor education programs.

    .
    Anil Pandey
    Sales
    HDFC AMC Ltd.
    Bhagalpur, India

    WOM can be used very effectively for financial products like mutual fund schemes and insurance products in a country like India where there is very less financial literacy and investor education programs.

    .
  • 13 MAY 2010
    Simon Austin
    Manager - Digital Analytics
    RIM
    Ontario, Canada

    This measurement framework has many problems given the current technical limitations. It assumes that it is possible on a large scale to accurately quantify the content of the conversation....

    .
    Simon Austin
    Manager - Digital Analytics
    RIM
    Ontario, Canada

    This measurement framework has many problems given the current technical limitations. It assumes that it is possible on a large scale to accurately quantify the content of the conversation. This simply isn’t possible to do accurately at this time (if there is a vendor that can do it, please contact me, I’d love to hear from you).

    Most automated solutions boast that they can track sentiment in the range of 80 to 90%. While I find even that level of accuracy questionable, that is still a very large margin of error when trying to measure the incremental impact of a campaign for an established brand. If determining whether or not a message is simply positive or negative is so error prone, then determining if a message is a “key buying factor” + a positive message + the “consumer’s own experience” will almost certainly compound the error to unacceptable levels.

    The alternative is to have people manually read all discussions, or manually read random samples of discussions. However even this has major problems as it becomes very resource intensive quickly, and there are significant issues with manual sentiment scoring that have been detailed by others better than I can explain here (http://www.syncapse.com/media/syncapse_sentiment_analysis.pdf). Again, you will have compounding errors if you try to bring in two more variables beyond sentiment.

    In short, the framework theoretically makes sense, but will not be usable until these real problems are solved.

    .
  • 10 MAY 2010
    Anna Harper
    MS
    Dove House Feng Shui
    Netherlands

    I agree with Sarah Owen, as a provider, tracked revenue is what counts, not just WOM, in the end all forms of advertising have to deliver on the dollars time and effort spent on it....

    .
    Anna Harper
    MS
    Dove House Feng Shui
    Netherlands

    I agree with Sarah Owen, as a provider, tracked revenue is what counts, not just WOM, in the end all forms of advertising have to deliver on the dollars time and effort spent on it. WOM has served me very well, generating nearly all of my projects.

    .
  • 10 MAY 2010
    Pankaj Prakash
    Senior manager- marketing
    ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
    Mumbai India

    The growing focus on WOM also acts as an indicator of the growing distrust of the consumer of the traditional media.

    .
    Pankaj Prakash
    Senior manager- marketing
    ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
    Mumbai India

    The growing focus on WOM also acts as an indicator of the growing distrust of the consumer of the traditional media.

    .
  • 7 MAY 2010
    Fernando Okumura
    CEO
    kekanto.com
    Sao Paulo, Brazil

    ...An interesting analysis could be to compare the results you observed in the countries classified as emerging markets with their respective educational indexes.

    .
    Fernando Okumura
    CEO
    kekanto.com
    Sao Paulo, Brazil

    At the consumer and community level, you can look at the average educational level of the population as it correlates negatively with emotional decision making, which is a large component of WOM.

    In mature markets, the consumer tends to be more educated and, therefore, his decision tends to be more structured and rational. (If I’m not mistaken, there’s a study about this mentioned in that book Please Understand Me, about Myers-Briggs types.) We could say the figures in stage 2 and 3 showing Internet research as top factors are suggestive—not to mention that Internet penetration in emerging markets is much lower.

    WOM is more of an emotional tool (especially offline) as it depends heavily on the recipient’s perception of the person sending the information. That said, we could throw the hypothesis that reliance on WOM is positively correlated with the lower educational levels observed in emerging markets. An interesting analysis could be to compare the results you observed in the countries classified as emerging markets with their respective educational indexes.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Langa Khanyile
    CEO
    Kontra
    Johannesburg, South Africa

    ...knowing whether the culture is a collective one versus an individualistic one would surely be a more relevant frame than whether a country is developing or not for a marketer who wishes to maximise his ‘talkability’...

    .
    Langa Khanyile
    CEO
    Kontra
    Johannesburg, South Africa

    I, too, was quite intrigued by Matthew Donovan’s point on mature versus developing countries being a misleading frame. My own experience of delivering campaigns in a country that is often described as a microcosism of the two (South Africa), has taught me that as consumers move from a ‘developing country’ lifestyle to one that more closely resembles the developed world, they tend to apply a more individualistic approach to their purchase decisions.

    In a country with one of the highest Gini coefficients in the world, you find it is these upwardly mobile consumers who account for the bulk of consumer spending and are most targeted by marketers. Thus, knowing whether the culture is a collective one versus an individualistic one would surely be a more relevant frame than whether a country is developing or not for a marketer who wishes to maximise his ‘talkability,’ as in some instances this has lesser bearing on consumer behaviour.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Jim Hansen
    CFO
    Henry V Events
    Portland, OR USA

    Merge the experiential and consequential elements and you get exponential ROI. You accomplish the merge by making an experience of the product THE marketing message via an experiential event....

    .
    Jim Hansen
    CFO
    Henry V Events
    Portland, OR USA

    Merge the experiential and consequential elements and you get exponential ROI. You accomplish the merge by making an experience of the product THE marketing message via an experiential event. We can attest to the absolute accuracy of Bughin’s, Doogan’s and Vetvik’s research.

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Abdul Wahab Shaikh
    Student
    Atlanta, GA USA

    ...I was curious to hear in the podcast the WOM campaign would not be recommended for brands with negative sentiment due to its ‘amplifying’ role....

    .
    Abdul Wahab Shaikh
    Student
    Atlanta, GA USA

    I found the concept of WOM very interesting and relevant; definitely something we have been discussing in our courses. However I was curious to hear in the podcast the WOM campaign would not be recommended for brands with negative sentiment due to its ‘amplifying’ role. If executed appropriately, I would have thought it would be an effective tool offset the negative sentiment. For example: wouldn’t it serve Toyota well to use its large customer base of satisfied consumers to reduce the negative buzz around its brand currently?

    .
  • 5 MAY 2010
    Kannan Gopalakrishnan
    Singapore

    ...The higher dependence on WOM in developing markets also seems to indicate to a proliferation of brands and information and the need to know more from friends and trusted experts.

    .
    Kannan Gopalakrishnan
    Singapore

    It is interesting to see the interest in word of mouth. Is it a case of ‘coming back full circle’ for word of mouth? What is making word of mouth more important, now, again? It appears that in the early ages of doing business, consumers shopped based on proximity and word of mouth. After going through PR, advertising, etcetera, it seems to be word of mouth again. Is it because of a glut of everything and the need to sift through brands and communication and hence going back to people you trust to help in easier decision making? If so, marketeers need to figure out the few things that differentiate their brands with others in the new world of over information. The higher dependence on WOM in developing markets also seems to indicate to a proliferation of brands and information and the need to know more from friends and trusted experts.

    .
  • 4 MAY 2010
    Aldo Gnocchi
    Student M.A. HSG MSC
    University of St. Gallen
    St. Gallen, Switzerland

    ...how do you assess low and high impact? How do you identify the influencers? The content you find on the Web is enormous....

    .
    Aldo Gnocchi
    Student M.A. HSG MSC
    University of St. Gallen
    St. Gallen, Switzerland

    Thanks for your interesting article. I was talking with friends about why Interbrand and the many other brand valuation systems do not consider social buzz for their brand assessment. Maybe you guys could meet with Interbrand, Young & Rubicam, etc. to implement the “word-of-mouth equity” approach in their brand valuation systems.

    There are just a few questions left: how do you assess low and high impact? How do you identify the influencers? The content you find on the Web is enormous. If even Google, for example, is not able to use the comments, feedback, recommendations, etcetera, you find in social networks—where people are talking about brands and organizations—for their own good, how should other companies/brands be able to monitor the so called “buzz” in the Web? I like your approach, but I personally think that even if the idea is very good and valuable for marketers, this approach is not easy to use in practice. I’m looking forward to your feedback.

    .
  • 4 MAY 2010
    Kamer Yuksel
    President-Elect
    SoCal American Marketing Association
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    ...it is very difficult for consumers to articulate what their feelings are about a product or what type of an emotional attachment they have with a product or service....

    .
    Kamer Yuksel
    President-Elect
    SoCal American Marketing Association
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    Overall, a very insightful article. The finding that suggests that marketers tend to use emotional positioning more than functional positioning, yet consumers seem to talk more about functionality is indeed an interesting point. However, my answer to that would be it is very difficult for consumers to articulate what their feelings are about a product or what type of an emotional attachment they have with a product or service. Most of this happens at the subconscious level and can not be really articulated. Instead, consumers talk about things that are easier to talk about, such as functional properties without really realizing why she/he really liked or disliked the product at the deeper level. As a result, emotional positioning can still be the most powerful tool that we marketers have.

    .
  • 2 MAY 2010
    Amitabh Bose
    Senior Vice President, CPG Practice
    WNS Global Services
    Bangalore, India

    A very interesting construct. In fact, drawing on the Kano framework of consumer satisfaction can well complement the what (are people talking) in your who/what/where framework....

    .
    Amitabh Bose
    Senior Vice President, CPG Practice
    WNS Global Services
    Bangalore, India

    A very interesting construct. In fact, drawing on the Kano framework of consumer satisfaction can well complement the what (are people talking) in your who/what/where framework. It is important for marketing managers to know the excitement, reversed, and linear dimensions in the brand construct.

    .
  • 30 APRIL 2010
    Paul Oz
    Artist
    pauloz.co.uk
    Birmingham, UK

    I think the degree of effectiveness of WOM, and what methods to employ, are very specific to the market and even product in question. There is no holy grail, or answer for all....

    .
    Paul Oz
    Artist
    pauloz.co.uk
    Birmingham, UK

    I think the degree of effectiveness of WOM, and what methods to employ, are very specific to the market and even product in question. There is no holy grail, or answer for all. In the art market for example, celebrity advocates have a huge effect, but I appreciate this won’t be replicated universally.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    We totally agree, Paul. Celebrities or other ‘formal stakeholders’ beyond consumer-level influentials are an important trigger to consumer-level WOM. It is interesting to note that the celebrity does need to be the right person with a particular image to create the most desirable effects. Credibility and trust are key (although there is value in surprising the receiver with a celebrity’s tastes).

    OUR REPLY
  • 30 APRIL 2010
    Jonathan Kopp
    Partner and Global Director, Ketchum Digital
    Ketchum
    New York, NY USA

    This study validates the power of digital public relations to engage consumers and influence conversations, attitudes, and behaviors across the social web. Well done.

    .
    Jonathan Kopp
    Partner and Global Director, Ketchum Digital
    Ketchum
    New York, NY USA

    This study validates the power of digital public relations to engage consumers and influence conversations, attitudes, and behaviors across the social web. Well done.

    .
  • 29 APRIL 2010
    Sarah Owen
    Referral Institute UK
    United Kingdom

    Any objections to measuring WOM based on tracked revenue results?

    .
    Sarah Owen
    Referral Institute UK
    United Kingdom

    Any objections to measuring WOM based on tracked revenue results?

    .
  • 29 APRIL 2010
    Mark Storey
    Franchise Owner
    Referral Institute Columbus
    Columbus, OH USA

    Your research is heartening, because measuring WOM is as important (if not more so, based on your data) than measuring results from typical marketing/advertising methods....

    .
    Mark Storey
    Franchise Owner
    Referral Institute Columbus
    Columbus, OH USA

    Your research is heartening, because measuring WOM is as important (if not more so, based on your data) than measuring results from typical marketing/advertising methods. Today and tomorrow, successful businesses will continually develop, test, measure, and improve their referral marketing plans. The companies who choose to ignore WOM and the ones that don’t continually stay immmersed in WOM education and insist their partner firms have the same knowledge, will be forever trying to catch up.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors respond:

    Mark, we would agree with you—the need to understand and harness WOM is likely to be greater for certain brands in certain categories (such as higher value, higher innovation categories) than in others (including lower value, habitual categories). However, it is interesting to note that ‘involvement’ as a concept is not terribly discriminating here. For example, we know that in insurance and retail banking, WOM is every bit as important as it is in skincare or telecommunications.

    OUR REPLY
  • 29 APRIL 2010
    Matthew Donovan
    Chief Strategy Officer
    Euro RSCG 4D
    New York, NY USA

    ...Jean-Phillipe and Sean are correct—WOM can be a tactic, but critically is an outcome of integrated brand effort. People do not talk about you without a trigger....

    .
    Matthew Donovan
    Chief Strategy Officer
    Euro RSCG 4D
    New York, NY USA

    2 thoughts:

    1. WOM is not free. Great WOM requires intentional design: thought manifested at the point of idea, product, brand creation, or communication. Jean-Phillipe and Sean are correct—WOM can be a tactic, but critically is an outcome of integrated brand effort. People do not talk about you without a trigger.

    2. WOM is different in mature versus developing countries. Well yes, but mature and developing is a misleading frame. Collective versus individual helps get to an understanding of how WOM operates in one culture versus another, and therefore how to apply WOM techniques in different ways in cultures where collective decision making is more prevalent.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors respond:

    Matthew, thanks for your post. As per Katherine Kern, we with agree with you on point 1 about WOM not being free. WOM is unique as it is both an outcome and a trigger. We outline the view that WOM has value in driving sales, but also in driving reputation or equity, it therefore can be characterized as both a trigger and an outcome.

    We are intrigued by your point 2—any data or anecdotes to support this (sounds intuitive though)?

    OUR REPLY
  • 29 APRIL 2010
    Rupak Dey
    The Brains
    Mad Vision
    Oslo, Norway

    ...what would have been interesting to read were the reasons why some organisations fail both functionally and strategically to employ or execute effective WOM marketing campaigns....

    .
    Rupak Dey
    The Brains
    Mad Vision
    Oslo, Norway

    I am sorry, but with all due respect, there is nothing “new” here beyond stating the obvious. For what would have been interesting to read were the reasons why some organisations fail both functionally and strategically to employ or execute effective WOM marketing campaigns.

    Are there for example, factors both macro and micro that stop or inhibit such marketing techniques? I say this in reference to the B2B marketing environment, and in particular, pharmaceuticals.

    Sorry to be a party pooper, but it would have been nice to have some B2B WOM examples, if there are any.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Jonathan Doogan, coauthor of “A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing”, responds:

    Rupak, I am sorry you find nothing new here. Indeed, much of what we say is intuitive, which we hope will therefore have more resonance, which does seem to be the case for a number of readers. I do agree with you on the B2B side. Having worked in pharma for over 15 years, it is an industry which requires special attention—we could not have done justice to the sector in an article in which we expressly sought to address the consumer world. There are principles which clearly apply to patient networks, for example, but also to physicians and potentially payers. The refinement and application of these principles to pharma are an interesting debate. Key opinion leader network mapping, for instance, is not new—any thoughts from your side about what would be new and relevant here?

    OUR REPLY
  • 28 APRIL 2010
    Bithika Mehra
    Manager, Research and Analytics
    Fanscape
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    Great post. The fact that experiential WOM accounts for 50-80% of total WOM, makes a strong case for brands to focus on serving their customers through social media channels....

    .
    Bithika Mehra
    Manager, Research and Analytics
    Fanscape
    Los Angeles, CA USA

    Great post. The fact that experiential WOM accounts for 50-80% of total WOM, makes a strong case for brands to focus on serving their customers through social media channels. Comcast has already become a classic case study in this.

    .
  • 28 APRIL 2010
    Matt Heindl
    Director of Social Marketing
    KBS+P
    NewYork, NY USA

    I don’t know how to measure WOM and social media marketing... but I know what it is when I see it.

    .
    Matt Heindl
    Director of Social Marketing
    KBS+P
    NewYork, NY USA

    I don’t know how to measure WOM and social media marketing... but I know what it is when I see it.

    .
  • 27 APRIL 2010
    Jean-Philippe Maheu
    CEO
    Publicis Modem
    New York, NY USA

    I agree with Sean Wu from Nestle. Success for a marketer is about finding ways to leverage all marketing communication art and science (traditional and digital) to generate positive word-of-mouth....

    .
    Jean-Philippe Maheu
    CEO
    Publicis Modem
    New York, NY USA

    I agree with Sean Wu from Nestle. Success for a marketer is about finding ways to leverage all marketing communication art and science (traditional and digital) to generate positive word-of-mouth. This is exactly what we are focusing on at Publicis. We call this “Contagious Ideas That Change The Conversation”. Thank you for a great article.

    .
  • 27 APRIL 2010
    Joachim Schulz
    Community Executive
    Wildfire
    London UK

    ...In Exhibit 2, I wouldn’t label it as “Impact”...

    .
    Joachim Schulz
    Community Executive
    Wildfire
    London UK

    In Exhibit 1, “Internet Information” for developed countries is actually on-line word of mouth. If you check the rating/comments of a hotel on-line (like you say in the report), it is word of mouth. So you need to add the on-line word of mouth with the off-line word of mouth.

    In Exhibit 2, I wouldn’t label it as “Impact”—where are they talking, what are they saying, who is talking, what is the trigger—but rather “Nature” or “Quality.” It’s the “volume x quality” that gives you the impact/equity of WOM.

    .
  • 26 APRIL 2010
    Michael Klausner
    CMO
    Groupable
    New York, NY USA

    ...What about an index that measures the consumer’s capability of being influential? Wouldn’t this be even more important to a brand—to know who to target...

    .
    Michael Klausner
    CMO
    Groupable
    New York, NY USA

    The article speaks about “word-of-mouth equity”—the index of a brand’s power to create messages that influence a consumer to make purchases. But focusing on this solves only half the issue. What about an index that measures the consumer’s capability of being influential? Wouldn’t this be even more important to a brand—to know who to target based on their ability to be intentional?

    This capability exists today. You don’t have to be a mobile phone company to have the granular data to target influencers. One such company, Klout, measures and rates an individual’s influence sphere, and Groupable now rates a group’s influence level. Both companies can drill down to specific categories enabling brands to hone in on the highest potential influencers relevant to them and provide an even better way to estimate the effect WOM has on brand equity and sales. With a brand knowing what messages may have more potential to be spread through WOM and the ability to find those who will enhance the spread, a more holistic picture comes into view.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    Great question, Michael. I also agree that an index that measures a consumer’s influence would be very valuable. In a sense, P&G’s Tremor—a WOMM organization that has, among other things, recruited influencial teenagers to test new marketing approaches and products, to get real-time feedback and to generate buzz—has this underlying formula. Such a formula would likely contain demographic, attitudinal, and behavioural characteristics which receivers find compelling. This mix of characteristics will vary significantly by category (and receiver segment), but some underlying principles, we propose, are the propensity to talk credibly or knowledgably in the category, status as a purchaser/early adopter, and whether or not they have a network of ‘listeners.’ How a marketer finds these guys is another question—and is more or less challenging depending on the data richness and their willingness to engage.

    OUR REPLY
  • 25 APRIL 2010
    John Bell
    Managing Director
    Ogilvy
    Washington, DC USA

    ...The intent of your idea—WOM Equity—is strong....That being said, measuring impact whether it be actual sales or some contributing force is difficult to do everyday....

    .
    John Bell
    Managing Director
    Ogilvy
    Washington, DC USA

    I applaud McKinsey’s recogniiton of the power of word of mouth marketing. As past president of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA) and head of our WOM business at Ogilvy, I clearly believe in it, myself. The intent of your idea—WOM Equity—is strong. The formula of volume + impact is better than volume + sentiment, which is what many of us apply everyday to measure WOM programs. That being said, measuring impact whether it be actual sales or some contributing force is difficult to do everyday. How you actually intend to apply the WOM Equity remains a mystery. I am concerned that it remains an academic achievement with no practical applicability. Marketers need real tools and methods. Our team focuses on “applied innovation” because we know that today’s marketers need concrete approaches they can apply now. You make some great claims around the effectiveness of WOMM on top of your own model and I would invite you and encourage you to come to a WOMMA event to share your ideas. You would find a hotbed of experienced marketers who would like nothing more than to strengthen our discipline via new thinking.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Jonathan Doogan, coauthor of “A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing”, responds:

    John, Thank you for both your challenge and invitation—we are happy to accept. WOM equity is an insight source which marketers should use to guide their investment decision making. We acknowledge the executional challenge of extracting value, and we provide a simple framework for this but do not claim to have a magic formula. The understanding of and continued tracking of WOM equity, we believe, has significant value on its own, and provides a bridge to application. We would be happy to continue to the conversation at WOMMA.

    OUR REPLY
  • 25 APRIL 2010
    Sean Wu
    Brand manager
    Nestle
    China

    Your article summarized a new way to help marketers think about WOM in terms of quantitative approach. It will be better to reveal how to leverage traditional marketing communication in order to generate WOM.

    .
    Sean Wu
    Brand manager
    Nestle
    China

    Your article summarized a new way to help marketers think about WOM in terms of quantitative approach. It will be better to reveal how to leverage traditional marketing communication in order to generate WOM.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    Thanks, Sean. Traditional marketing largely does not create significant intended WOM effects—most marketers are still trying to influence brand perceptions and behaviours of consumers, not consumers as influencers. However, the growing number that are generating WOM seem to tap into some basic principles such as surprising messaging, execution, or tone (bizarre, humorous, or ironic seem to work well). It helps if the messages relate indirectly or even tangentially to a value or message which people will talk about (the obvious link does not help the consumer to put their own spin on the message to make the story interesting)—and WOM equity can help here.

    OUR REPLY
  • 23 APRIL 2010
    Kevin Jones
    Partner
    Baby Boomer Creative
    Fort Collins, CO USA

    ...the power of one-to-many marketing is much larger now and expanding exponentially due to social media but this article spurred me to realize that the most powerful form of decision-making influence is becoming more manageable and measurable....

    .
    Kevin Jones
    Partner
    Baby Boomer Creative
    Fort Collins, CO USA

    Most of us, I think, realize that the power of one-to-many marketing is much, much larger now and expanding exponentially due to social media but this article spurred me to realize that the most powerful form of decision-making influence is becoming more manageable and measurable. I’ll be looking for more literature related to methods in this area.

    .
  • 23 APRIL 2010
    Fernando Okumura
    CEO
    Kekanto.com
    Brazil

    WOM does count more in emerging markets, as Exhibit 1 shows. Because the legal systems are not very effective, consumers have less recourse if the provider/product falls short, which increases the cost of a bad selection....

    .
    Fernando Okumura
    CEO
    Kekanto.com
    Brazil

    WOM does count more in emerging markets, as Exhibit 1 shows. Because the legal systems are not very effective, consumers have less recourse if the provider/product falls short, which increases the cost of a bad selection. Also, regulation on advertising is weaker, which means questionable claims more common, making consumers more skeptical about company-sponsored communication. These and other factors help explain Exhibit 1. Our company is a reviews site in Brazil that shares similarities with Yelp so we’ve been studying and experimenting WOM Marketing. Great article.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Jonathan Doogan, coauthor of “A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing”, responds:

    Thank you Fernando, your experience here highlights some very interesting contextual drivers for emerging markets WOM. Question for you, do you think there is anything at the consumer or community level which also drives this?

    OUR REPLY
  • 22 APRIL 2010
    Andy Sernovitz
    Author
    Word of Mouth Marketing
    Chicago, IL USA

    This is 100% correct.

    .
    Andy Sernovitz
    Author
    Word of Mouth Marketing
    Chicago, IL USA

    This is 100% correct.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    Andy, Good to hear from you. We appreciate your comment!

    OUR REPLY
  • 21 APRIL 2010
    Ravi Shah
    CEO
    Microticks Consultants
    India

    ...Your article gives credibility to these sites, and also provides them with tools to demonstrate their value to marketers and thus create important revenue stream.

    .
    Ravi Shah
    CEO
    Microticks Consultants
    India

    This goes a long way to explain the tremendous increase in the number of social networking–based shopping sites such as DealBuddie, which tries to tap into the experiential word-of-mouth, mylikes taps in the influential word-of-mouth, and many others. Your article gives credibility to these sites, and also provides them with tools to demonstrate their value to marketers and thus create important revenue stream.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors respond:

    Ravi, the rise of social networking sites provides much inspiration for how we think about WOM effects. It is great to see you apply the framework we put forward to different social networking sites. Thanks for your post.

    OUR REPLY
  • 21 APRIL 2010
    satinder kaur
    Deputy General Manager
    icici bank
    India

    Does this apply to transaction-intensive banking products?

    .
    satinder kaur
    Deputy General Manager
    icici bank
    India

    Does this apply to transaction-intensive banking products?

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors respond:

    Satinder, Thank you for your question. We have indeed completed some research in the retail banking sector (in Italy). Assuming that you’re referring to current accounts, our initial results suggest that the answer to your question is yes.

    OUR REPLY
  • 21 APRIL 2010
    Harry Hawk
    Co-Founder
    NYC Food Film Festival
    Brooklyn NY USA

    Your review of WOM advertising includes a focus on who, where, what, and the trigger. Missing from your review is the length of time and/or the nature of the WOM....

    .
    Harry Hawk
    Co-Founder
    NYC Food Film Festival
    Brooklyn NY USA

    Your review of WOM advertising includes a focus on who, where, what, and the trigger. Missing from your review is the length of time and/or the nature of the WOM. I can tell the average person that I had a great hamburger today and mostly people will ignore that for a variety of reasons and I am well known for hamburgers. I find WOM works best when the topic and if the information is memorable and detailed such that it enters long term memory and has the chance of producing action.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors respond:

    Harry, If we understand you well, by ‘time’ you mean that there is a value in both the repetition and interest in a message. I imagine that by ‘nature’ you mean the vividness of the experience or message. A combination of these—repeating something that is vivid or interesting—yields the maximum effect. Perhaps what you are describing is much like brand equity or reputation which are built utilizing WOM effects—and this cannot be built in an instant or without thoughtful investment in meaningful experiences or campaigns. Our experience is that WOM is both the cause and subsequent effect of reputation—but as you point out this is a very challenging effect to build. There is also the matter of product lifecycle: established hamburger chains probably create relatively low WOM effects given investment in marketing, however, new challengers which reach a certain level of prominence and have sufficiently interesting offerings or branding will create significant effects. You might be in a better position than we are to comment on examples.

    OUR REPLY
  • 20 APRIL 2010
    David Hachez
    Brand Activist
    RazWar
    Brussels, Belgium

    ...As a brand activist for a newly created shaving brand, I noticed there was nothing more effective than taking part in online conversations transparently with consumers both on brand reputation level and sales activation...

    .
    David Hachez
    Brand Activist
    RazWar
    Brussels, Belgium

    Thank you for this article that could eventually trigger a mind switch and maybe unlock the fear of some marketers to jump into the consumers’ conversations that are taking place today at a global level. As a brand activist for a newly created shaving brand, I noticed there was nothing more effective than taking part in online conversations transparently with consumers both on brand reputation level and sales activation; the only way to go is to actively engage as a brand with all honesty and genuine willingness to hear what our customers/people have to say. It helps at all levels of our company (product innovation, customer care, communication platform, etcetera).

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    David, Thank you, you raise a critical point. Striking the right tone—genuine, open, and honest—which cannot be faked, is critical to developing insights through blog participation. If, as you suggest, marketers and product developers should understand first hand what is being said in communities there is a real need to help them participate effectively and strike the right tone. Indeed there is a balance between participating freely and communicating consistently within company determined guidance.

    OUR REPLY
  • 20 APRIL 2010
    Sherif Fikry
    Sanofi Aventis
    Dubai, UAE

    Good article for FMCG, though applications in pharma may differ, tactically.

    .
    Sherif Fikry
    Sanofi Aventis
    Dubai, UAE

    Good article for FMCG, though applications in pharma may differ, tactically.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Jonathan Doogan, coauthor of “A new way to measure word-of-mouth marketing”, responds:

    Thanks, Sherif. We took a specific business-to-consumer, FMCG lens here. Having a personal interest in pharma, I believe the core principles hold, but agree that tactical execution is significantly different—especially at the physician level. Would be happy to discuss this with you further.

    OUR REPLY
  • 19 APRIL 2010
    Miro Slodki
    consultant
    brand central
    Toronto, Canada

    your readers might also find value from this: “The measurement of whispers” http://miroslodki.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/the-measurement-of-whispers/

    .
    Miro Slodki
    consultant
    brand central
    Toronto, Canada

    your readers might also find value from this: “The measurement of whispers” http://miroslodki.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/the-measurement-of-whispers/

    .
  • 19 APRIL 2010
    Katherine Kern
    Principal
    Comradity
    Old Greenwich, CT USA

    Great analysis and way to think about the different types of word of mouth. But I wonder if it is really “free” as you say in the first paragraph....

    .
    Katherine Kern
    Principal
    Comradity
    Old Greenwich, CT USA

    Great analysis and way to think about the different types of word of mouth. But I wonder if it is really “free” as you say in the first paragraph. When you consider everything that was spent—from product design to packaging to marketing to establish expectations and deliver on them—I’d hardly call Word of Mouth free. In fact, I think it would be interesting to analyze the spending mix on let’s say product design versus marketing and the volume and impact of Word of Mouth. For example, I think the perfect balance is to spend what it takes to design a product that exceeds expectations and target marketing on the people who care enough to notice.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    A fair challenge, Katherine! As we see it, the triggers for WOM put simply are experience of product or service, the impact of marketing campaigns (traditional or non-traditional), or indeed hearsay (a simple frame, there will be exceptions and sub-categories)—all of the above require significant investment. The point we were trying to make is that most WOM effects are esstentially free as marketers by and large are not trying to create this effect (with exceptions, such as Red Bull and Harley, among others) and therefore the unintended effect (positive or negative) could be considered ‘free.’ However, in strict terms, you are right. The analysis you propose is an interesting one—we have found that WOM volume and impact from product or service experience is around 70 to 80 percent, the rest being marketing or other secondary effects. This can be understood at a more granular level. Thank you for reading and highlighting these ideas.

    OUR REPLY
  • 19 APRIL 2010
    Alain Vande Kerkhove
    Managing Director
    The Marketing Executive Circle
    La Hulpe, Belgium

    ...Perceived as more risky and controversial than traditional techniques, WoM marketing can quickly generate unexpected issues and loss of control through multi-dimensional proliferation, unless it is managed and executed relevantly...

    .
    Alain Vande Kerkhove
    Managing Director
    The Marketing Executive Circle
    La Hulpe, Belgium

    Excellent article about a marketing technique that has existed for ages. Having moderated a debate in Belgium on that topic some time ago, word-of-mouth marketing has been defined by participants—all CMOs from large B2B and B2C organisations—as one of the most efficient, low-cost marketing techniques to effectively reach their audience while cutting through the clutter of traditional direct marketing, advertising, and purchase of mass media. But surprisingly, very few have implemented WoM prgrams in a regular and managed way. Perceived as more risky and controversial than traditional techniques, WoM marketing can quickly generate unexpected issues and loss of control through multi-dimensional proliferation, unless it is managed and executed relevantly as a full part of the marketing mix.

    For decades, Harley Davidson is probably one of the greatest examples of managed WoM marketing, where owners dictate what the brand really stands for. I personally believe that WoM marketing will come back in CMOs’ minds with the explosion of electronic media and social communities. And because its distribution model is (nearly) free, it will undoubtly take a new dimension in specific phases of the purchasing process, in all likelihood for the final decision. However, the ROI calculation could remain challenging for many marketers, as well as the real impact on business.

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    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    The authors reply:

    Alain, thank you. We could not agree more with the Harley example—it is a long standing classic in WOM terms. ROI as you mention is one of the core challenges, and in some respects was the starting point for our effort to understand WOM in more detail. We believe that the disagreggation on WOM effects at the brand level through WOM equity gives some foundational insights upon which to build ROI—in other words, the correlated impact of messages on purchase decisions disaggregated into important constituent drivers, most importantly, trigger or source, as well as the pass-on, or velocity effects of individual messages. Equipped with these insights, one can understand in more detail the primary and secondary ‘reach’ effects of a message created by WOM triggers—and the quality or impact.

    OUR REPLY
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Companies have long understood the power of word of mouth but have struggled to take advantage of it. In an April podcast titled “Harnessing the power of word of mouth,” McKinsey’s Ole Jørgen Vetvik explains a new way to measure the impact of word of mouth, and how marketers can use it to influence consumer behavior. To listen, use the audio tool in the box to the left.
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