The Internet can be used to get famous. Really famous. There are several
ways of doing that. Some have been well documented and in the last chapter we
discussed the attributes required to get famous. Given below are five unknown,
very fun, but highly effective ways of getting famous, leveraging the potential
of the Internet.
We come across these supposedly accidentally shot videos of someone
doing something remarkable without noticing that they are being filmed.
The person may be doing somersaults on the roof of a high rise building
practising his flips right next to a sheer 100 foot drop, oblivious to the
danger and enjoying his routine. Somebody uploads it and the clip has millions
of hits online. Soon the man’s identity is known and he becomes a household
name, and the media are at his door with interview requests, and he is even asked
to lecture school kids on the benefits of exercise. Sounds far fetched but this
is how the phenomenon of viral videos pans out. And mind you these are
invariably pre-planned and anything but spontaneous.
Now what is noteworthy here is that a viral video can make you very
famous in the proverbial overnight time span, and if you can successfully
effect one you have had it made. If one were to learn from the various examples
of successful viral videos one will realise that it is not really that
difficult to pull it off.One of the ground rules to follow is that the length has to be kept
short what with people’s short attention spans and the veritable deluge of
viral videos that has descended upon us.
It has to be remembered that a video
is not inherently viral. It has to be worked upon and made that way. A whopping
3 billion videos are viewed on YouTube everyday! How do you make yours viral in
such a scenario. The content needs to be reached to the right target audience
first for it to receive the right push that will make it viral.
To ensure that the video gets the initial attention, it does of course
have to create a
good first impression. Then the description or transcription that
accompanies the video is important too and the key words should be chosen with care.
Remember that YouTube is also a social medium. So get the conversation flowing
back and forth by initiating it and actively participating in it. Get the
traffic flowing so that it eventually it reaches viral proportions.
Take the case of the Star Wars kid video which got viewed a 900 million
times. And what was it about. A fat kid foolishly waving his stick about again
and again proving that there is vast market even for stupidity. See how much
better you are then. You probably have something useful to showcase. Justin
Bieber apparently had the same idea when his video of the song Baby was put up
on YouTube, paving the way for him to become the pop sensation he is today. He
started off with 50 million page views. The examples are umpteen actually
Or take the case of Amber Lee Ettinger whose video depicting her love
for President Obama was viewed 14 million times. Then there is the case of Ted
Willimas, the man with the amazing voice who got a job as an MSNBC anchor
thanks to his viral video on YouTube. So we see that viral video are a
proven and extremely effective way of gaining fame, provided one is able to use
it the right way
Go Blog
Blogging is one of the simplest and most effective ways of getting
famous, and the best part is that you could be anybody-the average Joe or the
wiz-kid of the block; both of you have an equal chance to hit it big by
blogging. The basic premise is that there have to be numerous people who are
more or less like you and would respond positively and appreciatively to what you
put up on your blog.
The way to achieve success is by updating your blog on a regular and
consistent basis and by focusing on quality. It might take some time for you to
build up your audience, but you will get there if you persevere. The trick is
to socialise. Comment on other people’s blogs and get them to comment on yours.
Let people know about your blog but do not over do it. Use the right vehicles
like Facebook and Twitter to reach your message to a vast audience in an
unobtrusive way.
It might also be a good idea to enable sharing buttons on your website.
That apart you can share links with other websites. When you do that traffic
gets diverted from your site to the ones that are linked. Those sites will get
to know of this through a ping back and they may in turn get interested in
yours. This way you create a virtuous cycle. Putting together a side-bar
embellished with link widgets takes you a step further.
While it is all very well to be blogging regularly you should monitor
the direction that your efforts are taking. Find out what constitutes the major
portion of your traffic, and customise your posts to cater for that section. It
also pays to be a bit smart. For instance you can closely study the strategy
applied by the most successful bloggers and try and replicate it. It might work
wonderfully for you and in double quick time too.
Another way of getting
noticed by the right people is to occasionally blog as a guest on other sites, which have synergy with your blog. This will put you in direct contact with
just the target audience you have always drooled over. This will be your chance
to win them over.
In essence blogging is something where time is on your side and you can
and will willy nilly make a great success of your blog, if that is what you
want to do. Really one of the best ways to get famous.
The truth of this is borne out by the many success stories of bloggers
who have become celebrities in their own right by the very power of their blog
posts. The most famous blog in the world is the Huffington post, which
specialises in breaking news pertaining to a wide array of subjects-world news,
entertainment, business, politics and fashion. Started by Arianna Huffington,
Kenneth Lerra and Jonah Perreti in 2005, the blog was acquired by AOL in 2011
for $315 million. Then there is the Micahel Arrington founded technology blog
Tech Crunch with a whopping $4.5 million subscribers, which was again acquired
by AOL for $25 million in 2005. You have traffic, the biggies will be waiting
in the wings to pay you a huge some for your coveted blog. That is the way the
cookie usually crumbles if you can show substantial traffic to your site.
For the gadgets aficionado there is Engadget, the blog started by the
former Gizmodos editor Peter Rojas, provides information on everything that
there is to know about electronic gadgetry. The popularity of the blog can be
gauged by the fact that it operates ten other blogs in English and six other
languages. This blog too is one of the famous purchases of AOL.
The point in sharing these examples is to showcase the tremendous power
of a blog in terms of how famous it can make you and the kind of revenue you
can possibly generate. Now not everyone will possibly be this successful, but
one can understand that a fair degree of success is possible for anyone who
is able to follow the methodologies discussed above. The degree of success of
course depends upon the degree of innovation and capacity to leverage displayed
by the individual.
If there is anything that people take to instantly, be it the offline
world or online world it has to be entertainment. Music, dance, food, fashion
and culture make the world go. And if you can put up stuff online that people
find genuinely entertaining you are set to achieve success, fame and wealth.
If you are a comedian or a singer or perhaps a painter there is no
better way of acquiring a fan base, than being on the Internet. People have
this urge to know the smallest detail about famous entertainers-their hobbies,
their food habits, their hang out joints and what it is that they wear. If you
can get a sizable group of people genuinely interested in your craft, you will
have them eating out of your hand, by leveraging such information on the
Internet.
Get across to your target audience by writing blogs about your
performances, posting videos. Give them a glimpse into your life- your joint
performances with other artists, any new deals you may have signed;the works.
You have got to remember that your success and livelihood depends upon your
fans being happy. So take full advantage of this interactive platform and get
to know your fans up close and personally. Respond to their comments and
criticism, chat with them online, send them mails, do everything it takes to
keep them hooked on to you and see where that gets you.
The thing that is of paramount importance for you should be of
identifying the right niche and segment that you want to focus your energies
on. If for example you are excellent at rock ballads but can sing hip hop too,
rather than diluting your image by catering to both the segments, it would make
sense to focus on your core competency. You will naturally attract more and
better quality traffic with something you are really good at rather than in
dabbling in several things you are only average at. In economics this is
referred to as the theory of the comparative cost advantage.
Once you are sure of your genre, you have got to give it your all. Use
blogging, social media, and YouTube for all its worth and try and form
associations everywhere. A multi pronged online approach will create
opportunities which will sometimes exceed your wildest expectations. A singer
might be approached by a multinational record label, and a cookery
blogger might get approached by a TV company for his own show.
The online world has so many examples of people fulfilling dreams of a
lifetime simply by being on the Internet. The website College Humor was founded
by Baltimore high school friends Josh Abramson and Ricky Van Veen as a
means of keeping in touch. Today it has grown significantly and receives 8
million male visitors between the ages of 18 and 24 every month. And how do
they entertain? By popularising a novelty foam hand by parodying the well known
‘We’re no 1’ foam hands sold at sporting events.
They actually used an inside
joke of college students and turned it into something else. Last heard they had
signed a deal with Paramount Pictures which has to do with making movies on
college humour.Take the unique case of self proclaimed ‘pirate’ George Ouzounian or
Mddoz who hails from Salt Lake City, Utah. He created the website, The Best
Page in the universe-the name has its origin in the now defunct Yahoo policy of
blocking sites which had the word best as part of the title.
So this started
off as a form of protest and took on a life of its own and eventually made one
of the most controversial and visited sites because of its often
vitriolic content that targets detractors. The point to be noted is that
notoriety is the flip side of fame, but as long as you get the traffic and
don’t break any laws, you will be attractive to marketers who will want to be a
part of the action.
A similar example is that of Rotton a website dedicated to morbid
curiosities. Revolting perhaps, but there are people who are drawn to this. It
was started in the California Bay Area in 1996 and has grown into this great
purveyor of the macabre with a dedicated fan base. Now there are regular
entertainers like actors, singers, performing artists, fashion designers and of
course regular people like you and me and not just the weird eccentrics,
who use the Internet to entertain, inform and engage.
You think you have what it takes to become an entertainer make the
Internet your friend. It is cheap, easily accessible and can put you in instant
touch with your prospective audience. Plus you get real time feedback on your
performance which you can effectively use to improve your act and make
it more in line with what people want. If you get it right, in time you are bound
to grow big.
Be a specialist
The Internet is a world that is teeming
with people’s posts, blogs, articles, pictures, videos, e-books, games and some
not so savoury content. How do you get noticed in this bewildering maze of
content. Going back to the economic theory of the advantages of comparative
cost, by specialising in a particular niche. Now what can that niche be? It is
something that you are particularly good at. Something that you can call your
own. You are so good and adept at providing that product and service there is
no one else who can replace you.
The online world is driven by content or information. If you are
effectively meeting specific requirements of a set of people better than anyone
else be it in the shape of music that your produce or game that you create,
then for that particular niche you are irreplaceable. The fact of the matter is
that your target audience expects you to be an expert. So you had better be, by
doing research and refining your skills. Make it your niche and yours alone and
nobody else’s.
Once you have the above sorted out and have traffic in place you
can go ahead and make money from this traffic. This can be done by signing up
for an affiliate program that lets advertisers place their advertisements on
your site for a consideration. Not only do you make money by marketing the
product or service, you also specialise in leveraging the traffic to your site to
earn more money-a win-win situation for you.
You can learn from the examples of others who have done
wonderfully well for themselves by focusing on the right niche. You would be
surprised that some of the best examples of niche marketing are not small
timers but large corporations. Take the case of the remarkable revival in the
sales of its computers by Apple. They designed silver boxes as replacement for
the old black boxes which were perceived as boring and Steve Job went after
designers and Microsoft geeks and eventually re-established Apple. Or
take the case of Groupon which made online coupons fashionable in preference
over boring old paper coupons. Their niche? Local businesses whom they wooed
with their creative writing style. Or take the case of Etsy which came as a
godsend for crafters and buyers. No longer did crafters have to depend
upon summer markets and farmers markets for their income.
A classic example is Hotmail the pioneering email service provider.
Sabeer Bhatia the Indian immigrant techie in the United States quickly realised
the humongous possibilities by making the email a ubiquitous service that it is
know. From being nearly broke to having Microsoft buy his small set up in a
multi million dollar deal, Sabeer Bhatia’s is a classic tale of how correctly
identifying a niche for you to exploit can one day make you a fortune.
Following up on the above where one talked about creating or discovering
one’s own niche; this cannot and will not happen unless your product or service
is unique and in a class of its own. Before you come to as to what makes you or
your offering unique, we need to address a more basic question. Who are the
people that you plan to serve? For example if you plan to be an author, you
cannot be writing about everything under the sun and expect to make any
headway. There would be so many like you who wouldn’t have the slightest clue
about what the profile of their average reader would be.
However if you want to
be known as an author who writes books whose characters hail from Brisbane, you
would be able to identify your target audience-the people of Brisbane. Now you
can go all out and woo the people of Brisbane. How many authors would there all
of whose characters would be from Brisbane? That would make you unique. You
would be able to through you books on the city explore different facets of it.
Its history, its people, its culture, its cuisine, its entertainment
hot-spots and so on. You could literally go to town with snippets from
your forthcoming books, information about the real life people and events that
inspired you, the part of Brisbane you grew up in and other like trivia. By and
by you would create a unique position as the definitive voice on Brisbane.
I
f you are looking for examples of uniqueness saving the day for
websites, the successful ones are all unique. Take the case of Facebook which
propounded a unique model of online social networking. Today there may be many
copycat sites. But can they replicate even a tiny fraction of the success that
accrued to it? Not a chance!. Because they were clearly not unique.
Well Facebook may be a legendary example, but there are many many more
which validate the contention that being unique is the first step taken towards
online celebrity and fame. Take the case of Saddleback Leather, the leather bag
company par excellence. There is no other lather bag company that manages to
have its aura, its personality and its fan base. Log into the website and you
will come across bull fights in Mexico, travel in third world countries, the
everyday joys of life and heart warming anecdotes about the owner’s pet
Labrador Blue. What further touches a sympathetic chord with its core audience: ‘They will fight over it when you are dead!’
If there can be so much passion and uniqueness attributed to handbag The
Mast Brothers can be forgiven their obsession with hand crafted chocolate. For
that is indeed their USP, marketing jargon that stands for Unique Selling
Proposition. Rick and Michael Mast convey that “we’re from the 18th century,
back when craftspeople were revered and took pride in working with their
hands.” That line conveys their uniqueness unequivocally. They drive in
the uniqueness of their product by travelling by sailboat to foreign shoes to
being home the best cocoa possible for their chocolates. Now wouldn’t their
clientele be theirs and theirs alone for life. They naturally have gone to town
on the Internet publicising the uniqueness of their products in the most unique
way possible.
You may think that this is an over the top and eccentric way to prove
that you are unique, but when the stakes are high can it be otherwise? Work out
your uniqueness quotient before you even begin to think of making mass contact.
That being said, there is nothing in this world that stops you from finding
your niche. The Internet universe is a
much fairer and more democratic organism than what has ever evolved over the
eons, and everybody has a fair chance at communicating with like minded
individuals. This is the Internet’s greatest strength. Make it yours