Blogging About WIndex Might Cure Baldness!
Sometimes marketing’s not about what’s it’s about, you know what I mean? We all saw an example of how that works when the surprise hit movie, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" made a star out of Windex Glass Cleaner®.
In the low-budget comedy film, Mr. Portokalos, the Greek family patriarch, uses Windex to cure everything from acne to baldness. When "Wedding" turned out to be one of the most profitable films of all time, it made a star out of actress Nia Vardalos, and, as an "aside", resulted in a 23% increase in sales for SC Johnson’s product WIndex!
Business owners, just think about that one for a moment. The blue bottle of glass cleaner appears seven times in the film, for a total of less than 30 seconds. The four additional mentions of the product in dialogue makes a total Windex exposure of less than one minute out of the movie’s 95-minute run. That’s been one momentous minute, I tell you! Brand marketing experts estimate that well over one hundred forty four million people have been exposed to the miracle Windex cure.
There are so many parallels here to corporate marketing through blogging, I hardly know where to begin. First, box office results for "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" followed a pattern reminiscent of blog marketing. The movie attracted a mall audience and earned only $822,000 in its first week of release in April 2002. But, says Igor Muravyow of ePROPSHOP, Inc., "the praise of movie patrons resulted in the film’s gradual spread from city to city, and….this sleeper became…the highest-grossing independent film ever." The blogosphere is the ultimate word-of-mouth arena, but business owners who expect their corporate blog to generate overnight business success will be disappointed.
Back in November, I advised including unusual combinations of things in your blog to offer readers a new way of looking at your topic and showcasing your expertise (See Get Tammy Dancing With Elvis In Your Blog). The "Big Fat – Windex" connection, in my view, succeeded because it was so outrageously unexpected. Even so, my professional ghost blogger instinct tells me, the association with the movie wouldn’t have done nearly so much for the Windex bottom line had there been one minute-long mention of the product in the film. The effectiveness came from the eleven short, repeated exposures to the blue bottle. This is exactly the way blogging works to attract attention on the Internet. Consistent, repeated, short blogs satisfy two crucial search engine criteria: frequency and recency of posting your blog.
If you’ve got psoriasis or acne, or you’d love a thicker head of hair, I really don’t know if either blogging or Windex can help. What I do know is that in today’s economy, the most cost-effective way to get the word out about your product or service, to exactly the audience you’re targeting, is to incorporate blogging into your online marketing strategy.
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