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First published online January 1, 2014

Not All Fun and Games: Viral Marketing for Utilitarian Products

Abstract

The success of products such as FarmVille has prompted many firms to engage in viral marketing on Facebook and other social media websites. Yet is the viral marketing approach adopted for games suitable for other, more utilitarian products? This study aims to answer questions that link product characteristics and contexts to viral marketing success: Should primarily utilitarian products rely on the same sharing mechanisms for their viral marketing campaigns as less utilitarian products? If not, why is this the case, and how should viral marketing for primarily utilitarian products differ? This empirical study analyzes the Facebook viral marketing campaigns of 751 products and reveals that the same sharing mechanism that made FarmVille so successful is the worst possible mechanism for promoting primarily utilitarian products. These findings are in line with theory from social psychology: because consumers do not visit Facebook to learn about utilitarian products, they rely on simple cues and heuristics to process viral marketing messages about these products. This study thus contributes to literature on viral marketing in general and sharing mechanisms in particular; it also offers practical, hands-on recommendations to marketing managers in charge of designing viral marketing campaigns for both more and less utilitarian products.

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Published In

Article first published online: January 1, 2014
Issue published: January 2014

Keywords

  1. social media marketing
  2. viral marketing
  3. utilitarian
  4. sharing mechanisms
  5. Facebook
  6. apps

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© 2014 American Marketing Association.
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Authors

Affiliations

Christian Schulze
Frankfurt School of Finance & Management
Lisa Schöler
Frankfurt School of Finance & Management
Bernd Skiera
Goethe University Frankfurt

Notes

(e-mail: [email protected]).
(e-mail: [email protected]).
(e-mail: [email protected]).
This research was financially supported by the E-Finance Lab at the House of Finance in Frankfurt. The authors acknowledge three anonymous JM reviewers for their great feedback and suggestions. The authors are also grateful for comments and suggestions provided by Myriam Bechtoldt, Jan Becker, Jan Landwehr, Raji Srinivasan, Nils Stieglitz, and Michael Trusov as well as from seminar participants at University of Texas at Austin. Leigh McAlister served as area editor for this article.

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