Top Ten Favorite . . . Ahh, enough already.

Posted in Marketing, Viral by Chris Ammon on September 6th, 2007

A blog post from makeuseof.com ran up digg yesterday and got me wondering about all the lists we create. You see them posted all the time: ”My list of favorite X.” This one is pretty typical: 40 Unusual Websites You Should Bookmark.

What compels someone to construct a list like that? Considering the many companies and services mentioned, I’m hopeful makeuseof.com has not become a PR shill. So why? And why would those 40 make this list? Call it coincidence, but Seth Godin wrote a short post yesterday that hits on the topic. Is makeuseof.com an Official Influencer? Were they targeted by marketers? Likely not. With the barrage of Web applications that seem to pour onto the Internet every day, one magical thing still makes them boom or not…and it’s called “do I give a crap about what it does?” As Seth wrote:

…the most effective technique [for viral campaigns] is making stuff worth talking about in the first place. True viral marketing happens not when the marketer plans for it or targets bloggers or skateboarders or pirates with goatees, but when the item/service/event is worth talking about.

Customers, users, visitors, chumps. Call us what you will, but it’s we humans that matter, not what the application does. Make a product worth using, worth talking about, and you just may be on to something. You can try all day to make it viral, to be on as many lists as you can worm your way onto, but if Your Thing does nothing I need, ciao, baby.

Del.icio.us, Digg, Technorati, Furl, Reddit, Spurl

One Response to 'Top Ten Favorite . . . Ahh, enough already.'

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  1. Aibek said,

    on September 6th, 2007 at 2:29 pm

    Hi Chris

    You got a good point: “Make a product worth using, worth talking about and you just may be on to something.”.

    Over the last year makeuseof listed over 2000 web applications, and when you review apps on a regular basis you come across a huge number of duplicates. I am pretty sure I can count 20 online storage applications without even giving it much thought. The idea behind latest post was to list apps that are more/less unique in their service.

    Once in a while I do review apps for payment (via ReviewMe) but in all such cases I mention the nature of the post in the first two lines.

    Aibek

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