Creating engaging content to encourage social sharing involves a mix of creativity, strategy, and understanding…
What Motivates People to Pass Content On?
If you know what motivates people to pass your content on, you have a much better chance of getting them to keep doing so in the future. Why is it that people are willing to continually pass on content from certain sites to friends, while not at all for other sites?
These are some of the main factors in play when it comes to why people pass on certain pieces of content.
==> Thinking Emotionally Rather Than Logically
Really great marketing gets people to take action by having them think emotionally rather than logically.
For example, if a video gets someone really shocked and outraged about some political position, they might post that video on their Facebook wall without necessarily double-checking any of the facts in the video.
It wasn’t necessarily that the video presented shocking facts, but the fact that they managed to get the viewer in an outraged emotional stage.
If you can get your content to really get people fired up, they’ll often be much more willing to pass it on to their network.
==> Wanting Their Friends to Have a Good Experience
This principle is very basic. It’s the same reason why we recommend restaurants and movies to friends: we just want them to have a better experience.
If you create a website that helps people in a certain industry do things faster and cheaper, there’s a good chance your content will get passed around simply because people want their friends to have a better experience.
To make this process easier, it often helps to have “sound bite sized” pieces of information. For example, if you run a website about how to repair your credit, instead of having someone just pass on your website, it’s much easier for them to pass on an infographic specifically about how to repair your credit before buying a home, if they had a friend who’s on the verge of buying.
==> You Helped Them; They Want to Help You
Have you ever had the experience of getting such great customer service that you wanted to return the favor? For example, you go to a restaurant whose service is so spectacular that you feel like you want to bring more people to their establishment just because you want to help them out.
If your clients get the sense that you’re really looking out for them and that you really care about them, they’ll often be willing to return the favor.
Ordinary service doesn’t elicit this kind of loyalty. But if you provide exceptional service, this kind of marketing can be one of the most powerful tools in your arsenal.
Many viral campaigns work just by using one of these principles. A few of them activate all three principles and really take off. Which ones make the most sense for your business?