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Zarrella's Hierarchy of Contagiousness: The Science, Design, and Engineering of Contagious Ideas
 
 

Zarrella's Hierarchy of Contagiousness: The Science, Design, and Engineering of Contagious Ideas [Kindle Edition]

Dan Zarrella
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Want to learn how to maximize social media? When to do it, what words to use, who to tweet at? Look no further than Zarrella’s Hierarchy of Contagiousness: The Science, Design and Engineering of Contagious Ideas. Social media master Dan Zarrella has amassed years of experience helping people negotiate the often mystical place of social media marketing. Now, he has condensed those well-tried ideas into this concise and conversational book. Zarrella’s Hierarchy of Contagiousness demystifies and deconstructs how social media works, who it benefits and why we all depend upon it to help our good ideas spread.

About the Author

Dan Zarrella is an award-winning social media scientist at HubSpot. He has a background in web development and combines his programming capabilities with a passion for social marketing to study social media behavior from a data-backed position and teach marketers scientifically grounded best practices.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 609 KB
  • Print Length: 64 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 193671924X
  • Publisher: The Domino Project (23 Aug 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B005BP1Y36
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #71,548 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition
I read this last night and it's excellent. Full of insightful data that will help you understand and manage your social media activity more effectively.

Instead of the usual 'rainbows and unicorns' myths and untruths that lots of 'social media experts' talk about, Dan Zarrella (Hubspot) has condensed his many years of expertise and data analysis into this highly readable and conversational book which will make you think differently about all you've done (and been told) before.

Includes data on the best days and times to Tweet or update your Blog / Facebook status, why people share things (and what makes them shareable), the most common trigger words that can help build up your 'Followers' / 'Fans' or encourage people to share and Retweet your content. Essential reading.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Pilar
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Through the Kindle post I found out that Dan Zarella was giving his book away for free for a limited period. I like anything that challenges popular advice (especially when it's free!), so I downloaded Zarella's Hierarchy of Contagiousness: The Science, Design and Engineering of Contagious Ideas, it looked interesting and I thought it might help me with my "social media strategy".

I'm glad I did. It's a short read and therefore the advice to those of us who use technology to promote our work and ourselves, is brief. But it takes some popular myths and spins them on their head (such as at which times of day you're more likely to get click-through rates). The data to support his advice is not vast, but at least he has taken the time to carry out some small experiments. My favourite one is the "Retweet" experiment, where he gave a group of people an article to read which showed it had been tweeted 776 times. He gave another group the same article with a different button, showing the post hadn't been tweeted at all. I always thought that when a post shows a high number of tweets, it is more likely to be tweeted.

In this case, I was wrong. 18 people tweeted the article when it appeared to be "tweet-less" and only 8 people tweeted it when it showed a greater number of tweets. What's most surprising to me is that over 4,000 people had read the article in each case, so the tweet number seems low to me. Not sure what the article was about, but it would have been good to be able to read it (as an appendix perhaps) and also to know whether 18 is a high tweeting number or not.

So, I suppose, that while I did find the data presented interesting, I would have liked more depth. But that's ok. The main point of the book (in a similar vein to Bad Science, or Flat Earth News by other authors) is: don't believe everything you are told by "the experts".

I found the list of words which might make a tweet or facebook post more popular, very interesting.

I really liked how in the last section of the book, Zarella encourages the reader to experiment for themselves and monitor what works and what doesn't, similar advice to that which Dr Karl might give on his programme - when possible, experiment and see for yourself what's true and what isn't.

Zarella's last sentence is my favourite. It's specific about social media, but has a much broader application.

"The next time you hear a social media myth, question it. Ask for the proof and ask out loud."
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Amazon.com:  26 reviews
61 of 64 people found the following review helpful
Rainbows & Unicorns - Waking Up to REAL Social Media 23 Aug 2011
By Mark Alan Effinger - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
OK, as a social media maven for... well, since the word was invented, I figured Dan's read would be perfect yawn material for curing my fractured sleep cycle.

Not so. In fact, I should have known better. Anything stamped "Domino Project" is almost a sure bet. This is no exception.

Here's the intro paragraph to help align your brain to the following content:
"If you've read about social media or been to any marketing conferences, you've probably heard tons of advice like "love your customers," "engage in the conversation," "be yourself," and "make friends." I call this "unicorns-and-rainbows advice." Sure, it sounds good and it probably makes you feel all warm and fuzzy. But it's not actually based on anything more substantial than "truthiness" and guesswork."

But wait, it gets better.

In addressing the Spread of Ideas (or Viralness, the favorite meme of social media marketers everywhere), Dan developed a simple hierarchy, similar to Maslow:

1- "The person must be exposed to your content. This means that the person has to be following you on Twitter, be a fan of your page on Facebook, subscribe to your email list, and so on.
2- The person must become aware of your specific piece of content (the idea you want to spread). He has to read your tweet or open your email message.
3- The person must be motivated by something (generally in the content itself) in order to want to share the idea with his contacts.

Now, at this point you're going "Isn't this Seth Godin's Idea Virus all over again?"

Well yes. And no. Because quite a few years have elapsed. What worked then (Seth giving away a PDF to drive book sales at, uh, Borders...;-) could be construed as noise now. Unless you've been busy building an audience and a platform - which is the REAL focus of the book.

Oh, and metrics. METRICS. Measuring social media results is something Dan doesn't take lightly. And neither should you.

There are graphs. There are charts. And there are meaningful baselines to work from. The pie is not in the sky. It's on your (social media marketing) plate. Get your slice.

Here's one of Dan's finishing thoughts:
"Now you know better. You know how to see through the unicorns-and-rainbows myths. Don't listen to the snake-oil salesmen when they deceive you with their prescriptions for exotic tonics. You have science now. Marketing shouldn't be based on luck. You can produce results from social media that are reliable and repeatable. You have control.

For social media experts, there will be some "duh" level content. But even so, it's sprinkled liberally with plenty of new "a-HA!" insights to make even those boring old standards take on new color.

I'm giving it 5-Stars. Not because it's Seth's label. (Though I long to be on Domino... someday... someday...).
Because it's relevant. Fast-acting (read it before your next marketing meeting - and rock the house). Fun. And makes sense.

BTW: Hubspot is also a cool company. Dharmesh Shah and Mike Volpe are awesome folks in the industry, who don't compromise. And have set new standards (if you haven't used their Website Grader, do it today. It's free, and will get you started on the road to REAL online optimization - we're just pissed they give it away - we wanted to sell a similar service for $$$).

Other people in this genre' worth watching include David Meerman Scott (one of my very favorites). Start here: The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use Social Media, Blogs, News Releases, Online Video, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly - all of his works are excellent. You can also get a taste on his blog, WebInkNow.com.

Chris Brogan is legend: The Zen of Social Media Marketing: An Easier Way to Build Credibility, Generate Buzz, and Increase Revenue

Ann Handley rocks - Total Stat Queen: Content Rules: How to Create Killer Blogs, Podcasts, Videos, Ebooks, Webinars (and More) That Engage Customers and Ignite Your Business (New Rules Social Media Series)

To craft your own social media goodness, here's the writing tool of champions (includes social media keyword search results and other fun tools): Novel Writing Software - ThoughtOffice Muse Creative Writing Software Suite Mac OSX - Windows XP-7

If you don't know Guy Kawasaki, you're clinically dead. Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions

And nothing is sweeter than making your social media efforts into your passionate living. Nobody says it better than Hugh MacLeod: Evil Plans: Having Fun on the Road to World Domination

That's a rap, folks. Get social. Measure results. Build your platform. Engage. And have a blast on the way.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Social Media advice and insight from a REAL expert! 23 Aug 2011
By lordlancaster - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition
I read this last night and it's excellent. Full of insightful data that will help you understand and manage your social media activity more effectively.

Instead of the usual 'rainbows and unicorns' myths and untruths that lots of 'social media experts' talk about, Dan Zarrella (Hubspot) has condensed his many years of expertise and data analysis into this highly readable and conversational book which will make you think differently about all you've done (and been told) before.

Includes data on the best days and times to Tweet or update your Blog / Facebook status, why people share things (and what makes them shareable), the most common trigger words that can help build up your 'Followers' / 'Fans' or encourage people to share and Retweet your content. Essential reading.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
The Science of Social Media - Ideas That Spread 23 Aug 2011
By Bradley Bevers - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Social Media Science sounds like a fairy tale, but Dan Zarella proves otherwise in his new book on contagious ideas. He focuses on social media because they are a "petri dish" for ideas, but the principles that he is able to extract from social media metrics can be applied to all of your ideas. This short book will tell you the best ways to spread your ideas and make them more contagious.

The author starts off by building his framework on three points. For your ideas to be more contagious, you must:

1. Increase the number of people exposed to your content.

2. Create more attention-grabbing content.

3. Include powerful calls to action.

Following this, the author provides relevant data to prove his claims. This information is invaluable, and very helpful to anyone who uses social media at all. For instance:

Do you know if it helps or hurts to call yourself a guru (or author, speaker, founder)?

Do larger groups or more active small groups spread ideas faster?

Are negative or positive ideas more contagious?

Should you talk about yourself?

How often should you share content?

What is the best day and time to attract "retweeters"?

What is the best time to blog for your click rate? For comments?

All of the answers to these questions, and many more, are in this book. Each section is short and to the point, no more than four paragraphs and a visual graph of the data that backs it up. This is a book that will pay for itself easily, and the information contained in it is valuable to every business, author, and marketer. Highly Recommended.
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