The Strippers Guide to Canoe Building. Go small or stay home.
This was my response to a recent profnet on viral marketing for small companies. I thought it was worth sharing.
The larger your potential audience the harder it is to make something become viral. The problem is that we all have the same base interests but our higher level interests are weird and varied. Everyone watches when somebody starts to take their clothes off, but only a few people are interested in bird watching or canoe making. So as a small business if you are marketing to everyone in America between 20 – 30 and you want to stand out then you are in big trouble. There are millions of people competing for the attention of the audience and they are all using tactics focused on the base interests of the masses. But if you narrow that audience to a tiny niche that is made up of your very best customers creating something just for them making something viral becomes very easy. I like to focus my clients not on building an audience but on building a congregation. An audience tunes in occasionally but has no loyalty. A congregation is much smaller but more passionate. A congregation will evangelize you to their sphere of influence. A congregation will forgive some of your mistakes. So if I am a small company with a niche product and I want to create something viral my first step is to build a congregation. The second step is to give that congregation what they want. Once you have done this making something spread virally through this congregation and the people they influence will be easy. It is much better to have a few hundred people who are crazy about your products than a few thousand people who are familiar with them.
I found this page a minute ago while looking for images of canoe’s. “The Strippers Guide to Canoe Building” I thought it was a perfect title.
I thought this picture was just too amazing not to post - brilliant marketing
“Our target market is men who will die someday”


“I like to focus my clients not on building an audience but on building a congregation. An audience tunes in occasionally but has no loyalty. A congregation is much smaller but more passionate.”
Brilliant! This is an excellent piece of insight. I hate to do it but I think your strategy is best exemplified by Apple. Apple is forgiven for all of its mistakes because its fan base is so loyal. The company really can’t lose.
Great Post