Wednesday, January 22, 2014

"What pushes someone not only to read a story but to pass it on?"

"In 350 B.C., Aristotle was already wondering what could make content—in his case, a speech—persuasive and memorable, so that its ideas would pass from person to person. The answer, he argued, was three principles: ethos, pathos, and logos. Content should have an ethical appeal, an emotional appeal, or a logical appeal. A rhetorician strong on all three was likely to leave behind a persuaded audience. Replace rhetorician with online content creator, and Aristotle’s insights seem entirely modern. Ethics, emotion, logic—it’s credible and worthy, it appeals to me, it makes sense. If you look at the last few links you shared on your Facebook page or Twitter stream, or the last article you e-mailed or recommended to a friend, chances are good that they’ll fit into those categories."

The Six Things That Make Stories Go Viral Will Amaze, and Maybe Infuriate, You

4 comments:

Aridog said...

My first impression...before I stopped reading:

Jonah Berger said “I’d go down to the library and surreptitiously cut out that page,”

Research? No, what made this guy think it was okay to cut out and steal part of a WSJ page from the library rather than take notes, or just go on line...it was already the 21st century and this guy is a thief of paper content that otherwise is on the Internet?

I should trust anything he does and assign it credibility? Why?

Known Unknown said...

Darn. I was hoping the link would be a sharable slideshow. It's actual reading. Yuck.

Calypso Facto said...

Number one at that link better be "breasts" or it has no credibility ...

Rabel said...

"I should trust anything he does and assign it credibility? Why?"

Because he's selling a book and his agent was able to get it promoted in The New Yorker.

This is hard evidence that he does, in fact, know quite a bit about marketing.

On the other hand he's at number 1525 on the Amazon sales rankings, so maybe not. If he knew all the secrets shouldn't he be top ten?

This quote, "When your mom sees an LOLcat, she has no idea what it is.” manages to be ageist, sexist and ignorant all at the same time.

He should let his Mother out of the basement. Pass it on.