You know, folks, sometimes "viral" can be really beautiful.
I'm sure many of you have already heard about Matt Harding's "Dancing" video sensation. More than 4 million people have viewed his latest release on YouTube and, according to the New York Times, at least another million have watched it on other sites in the two weeks since it first appeared. It has also spawned unprecedented media coverage around the world.
The video consists of Harding dancing a rather silly dance in 69 different locations, including India, Kuwait, Bhutan, Tonga, Timbuktu, the Korean DMZ and, at the 3:22 mark, in my hometown of Atlanta. This is a beautiful piece of Internet art; I defy you to watch and not smile as your heart fills to the brim with global goodness. (article continues below)
The current video is actually the third installment of a project that began in 2003, when a friend filmed Mr. Harding doing his dance in Hanoi where he worked designing video games. The whole thing blossomed from there as Harding soon discovered he really didn't like working a 9 to 5. So, he took the money he'd saved and embarked on a trip around the world where he performed his little dance in various cities as a way to show his travels to friends and family back home. As I always say, it only takes one good blog to launch a campaign...soon a blogger got a hold of his first video and then another and another. The next thing he knew, he was an Internet sensation, even before YouTube made such a thing commonplace. (Harding told his story in this great clip posted last year).
Soon after that first video, the Stride Chewing Gum Company offered to underwrite Harding’s subsequent travels with virtually no strings attached. While I don't quite get the connection between Stride and Harding's delightful global jig, this is one case where I'm not entirely sure that matters. In fact, it is the lack of brand connection and product promotion that makes the tie-in work. As the NY Times points out "the company is acknowledged at the very end, but amazingly, in this era of shameless commercial tie-ins, Mr. Harding is not obliged to wear a Stride T-shirt or deliver a little pitch for the product."
Had there been a more blatant promotion, there is no way this vid would convey the magic that it does; the fact that Stride kept the artistic integrity of the original global project has brought them extensive praise. Again, to pull from the NY Times article: "you can’t watch “Dancing” for very long without feeling a little happier. The music ... is both catchy and haunting. The backgrounds are often quite beautiful. And there is something sweetly touching and uplifting about the spectacle of all these different nationalities, people of almost every age and color, dancing along with an uninhibited doofus."
Of course, the real question is: did it work? Harding's 2006 video saw more than 10 million views and delivered major spikes in web site traffic for Stride Gum, plus a reported 8% increase in sales, not to mention global media coverage and brand awareness. Today, Stride has become the 5th best-selling brand in the sugarless gum category, up from 6th place in in 2007, when it tallied sales of $65 million, according to IRI. Prior to its relationship with Harding, Stride didn't even register on IRI's list of 20 top-selling brands. Clearly, the goofy dance is moving the needle.
So, I say congrats to Harding and Stride for proving that viral can indeed be beautiful, tasteful, remarkably subtle, and highly effective.
-- my two cents
BRIEF UPDATE: Check out the Stride Gum site for some great outtakes that didn't make the cut. Some are beautiful, others are hilarious!
Some content pulled from the reporting of CHARLES McGRATH of the New York Times.
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
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28 comments:
Amazing video and ur right - the most amazing part is how Stride kept their name off it.
The song which his friends created reached the top 10 of Amazon’s soundtrack downloads, and is in the top 100 of all mp3 downloads.
Once again, Jen, you hit it on the head. the fact that they aren't hyping themselves all over this thing is what makes it work.
I concur with your assessment. The video is charming, and Mr. Harding is a very lucky man to get such a cherry gig. If I chewed gum at all, which I don't, I'd be happy to support Stride after such a hands-off approach to viral marketing through supporting an already-started project. Hopefully more brands will follow suit, as it could be a boon both for them, and for artists, performers, and others who would like their pursuits underwritten without a corporate mandate to tie them down.
the stride peeps are brilliant for not f-ing this whole thing up.
great post, jen.
It takes balls for Stride to be so unobtrusive. They did the right thing. I hope this is a sign of things to come b/c I'm getting sick of all the bad virals out there.
Great post, Jennifer!
I hadn’t seen the Matt Harding video before– what a great idea!
What a neat concept - what a neat guy! Thanks for sharing Jennifer.
According to the Washington Post Stride saw an 8% bump in sales. Proof that it can work when it's done right.
Thanks for the post.
I'll add to Allison's comment that I never even heard of Stride b4 Matt's dancing, so it was also a great way to raise brand awareness.
Look at the pure joy of the children dancing with him. I wonder if he passed out samples of the gum after they danced.
That is totally awesome!
Travelocity would probably even trade in their gnome in order to be associated with Matt.
Stride should be congratulated on this amazingly global social project that has little (or nothing) to do with their product - but elevates their brand to a new level of social awareness and acceptance.
Nice post, Jennifer.
The best part is that b/c stride was so subtle, it made me go to their web site stridegum.com to find out more information on how they hooked up with this guy. Like you always say Jennifer people are curious, let us do the work and we will.
I agree with your blog post that what makes this work is that it was not created as a corporate viral campaign. Stride is leveraging the organic "oomph" of this video in the right way ... by staying mostly out of the way. I don't know that they have "demonstrated the impossible" as much as they have re-enforced the idea that consumers have good filters, but nonetheless, it works for me.
Thanks for calling my attention to that. It is powerful. At first, I thought, "OK, some guy dancing." But then it snowballed. It is truly a thing of beauty.
Sticking a brand all over it would completely ruin it. I'm very impressed that Stride would recognize that, fund it anyway, and have the wisdom to know that it would pay off for them. It is almost like the goodwill you create by contributing to charity. I'll chew some Stride just to say thanks.
I like this video 'cause I like dancing - and it's nice to know dancing can bond people around the world. With that in mind, I think it's also really nice for Stride to fund this man's trip. However, I completely tuned out once the credits started rolling. I think more people will know about the video and unless you work in the ad world or PR world, I don't know if you'd know about the Stride correlation. I am glad this guy got to travel the world, dance, and not have to wear a Stride t-shirt...but to me Stride is just this guy's rich and generous grandpa. I may be missing something here..
this is the best case study for anyone who thinks viral videos are a waste of time. viva la new world!
Finally something that isn't so in-your-face promoting a brand. After seeing the movie Sex In the City - I left trying to tally all the product placements in that movie and thought they must have needed all that corporate dough to pay the enormous salaries of the fab four. Was Bluefly trying to be coy by having a box with their huge logo on it in Carrie's room for one of the scenes? I love that Stride Gum kinda took a high road approach and simply underwrited this campaign for a credit at the end. I think that's a smart move on their part and I'm glad their sales have increased because of it.
Jennifer
Thanks for the posting. I think Stride have got it absolutely spot on, make them smile, make them laugh, but don't make them feel like they are being sold to.
I shared your blog with a bunch of friends of mine on ecademy (link below), I hope you don't mind? But isn't that the nature of viral ;-)
Links:
http://www.ecademy.com/node.php?id=107986
I agree with Lauri on her answer!
I've also noticed Stride featured in various TV shows. They have a great product placement campaign going on for sure.
I think it also shows how marketing and PR have changed. We can no longer rely on advertising or news releases to promote a product or service. Companies have to be way more creative. I don't think Stride could have received this much coverage if it just wrote a media release to announce a new product. And, isn’t it interesting that the media now considers videos on YouTube as newsworthy?
Very cool...thanks for pointing it out. It is amazing that there is not even a logo that ties Stride Gum in with the dancing clip that I saw although in the nytimes.com article it states there have been subtle mentions.This is a great viral marketing piece to be sure.
Kudos to Stride for recognizing an out of the ordinary opportunity and not applying traditional banner-in-your-face mentality
I wish more companies would show the integrity and courage (and tasteful restraint) that Stride has demonstrated with this sponsorship. IMHO it is a far more effective form of branding than plastering logos and trademarks left and right.
As for Mr. Harding - I hope that he continues to inspire more people to spread pure joyfulness around the world.
Thanks for sending this as I had not seen it before and it comes over very well, I agree with Cheryl, it's good to know things are changing in a positive direction.
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