If you think that making a video go viral is just luck, you’d be wrong. Of the videos that go viral on YouTube and other video sites, most were created for just that purpose. The people behind the video used just the right tools and took all the right steps to get the desired outcome, and you can too.
Your videos content is clearly an important part making it go viral. It should be either very humorous or something outlandish that makes people sit up and take notice. If the content is good, the quality of the video isn’t very important. If it is entertaining, people won’t care that is isn’t professional, in fact, sometimes it’s better for it to have an amateurish feel to it, as long as it makes viewers want to share it with others. Preferably, your video should be one of the select few on YouTube’s “Most Viewed” front page, because that’s when the views really start to explode.
Your video should be short, only about 30 to 60 seconds long. Anything much longer than that is hard to get people to commit. Be careful when giving your video a title because that is a major attention-getter. Sometimes you may have to use something a little misleading to get a better viewership. When you tag the video, include as many tags as you can that will help people find it if they don’t know the title. Be sure the video is embeddable so it can be posted to various websites.
When you upload your video, you need to act quickly and get as many views as fast as possible. Start with your address book and email it to as many contacts as you can. Ask them to forward it on to help get the ball rolling. The next thing you’ll need to do is to post it to all your social networking sites and to friend’s profiles. That will give it good exposure to friends of friends. After that, move out into the web and start posting it on forums, blogs, and any other appropriate sites to get the most exposure.
Start some controversy around your video by posting comments from multiple accounts, or get friends to help. A little debate can really get a video noticed, and although very few viewers will leave a comment, most will read them and may make them more willing to send the video along or talk about it to friends.
When posting your video on YouTube, you will have three thumbnail screenshots to choose from to post with the video. One of the three, one always comes from the middle of the video, so make sure that as you are creating the video, you have something in the middle that will make a good thumbnail. As soon as you have people sharing your video with friends and it’s getting all that exposure, it’s as good as viral.
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