Recently, a post I wrote about cell phones at weddings went WAY viral, getting shared 43,000 times in one day. It wasn’t an accident. Here’s how I did it.

The idea

Megan and I have had a couple discussions in months past about how much wedding photographers hate the ubiquity of guests with cameras at weddings. We’d both seen tons of photographic examples, and seen photographers bitch about it all over the web.

Two weeks ago, Jenny Jimenez, my favorite Seattle photographer, posted on her Facebook:

jenny-jimenez-unplugged
What I loved about Jenny’s perspective is that it wasn’t about the guests making her job hard — it was from the angle of guests truly being present for the event. It was less about professionals bitching, and more about couples and their guests being in the moment.

I got REALLY excited about the idea. I chatted with Jenny (who voiced that she wasn’t comfortable writing about it — didn’t want to upset clients), and so I decided that I’d take the idea and run with it.

It was immediately clear to me that the topic was going to be HUGE with photographers. Although I aimed the story firmly at Offbeat Bride’s readership, I knew that it would be photographers who’d spread the post.

See, the topic has been written about MANY times — but when photographers talk about it, it comes off as bitching. Essentially, it comes down to a service provider bitching about their clients — “They make it so hard to do my job! All these uncle bobs getting in my way! Fuck those people!” Here’s just one example.

But Jenny’s post gave me the perfect angle to approach the issue, not from a “it’s so irritating” angle, but from a positive, encourage your guests to be present with you way. This isn’t about a whiny photographer not getting their shot, it’s about families and friends being able to connect. That said, since I knew that wedding photographers loved to bitch about it, I knew they’d spread the word for me.

Megan and I did some brainstorming — this trend piece needed a nice phrase that summarized the concept. What it needed was some branding. It needed a quick elevator pitch phrase to encapsulate the concept. We bantied around a TON of ideas (I wanted something that rhymed or had alliteration), and “unplugged weddings” was the best of the batch. (Unplugged should sound familiar to some of you. All part of the plan. But I’m getting ahead of myself….)

Writing the press release post

First I found some sources and quotes, which was easy thanks to the beast that is the Offbeat Bride Tribe. (Note to self: I really need to make better use of that as a market research tool.)

Then, sources in hand, I sat down to write the post, which got so long it that I broke it into two posts. This was extra awesome because it stretched the first traffic spike over 48-hours. The first half was written as a news article — the title was distinctly newspapery, and I did things like include sources full names, locations, and ages. The second post was all about the actual practical advice for brides.

Phase 1 of promotion: social media

The first post went live at noon on Monday. The initial publicity push was modest:

  • Post on Offbeat Bride’s Facebook/Twitter
  • A second post on Offbeat Bride Twitter, specifically asking people to share it (weirdly effective! I’ll never get why that works, but it does.)
  • Post on personal Facebook and Twitter
  • A post on Jenny Jimenez’s wall, but she was out of town and didn’t see it for a few days

Again, my primary strategy was that the post be heavily shared by photographers. And it was. Monday afternoon and evening, the first wave of photographers closest to us (sponsors, readers, friends) spread the story via Facebook and Twitter.

By Tuesday morning, Twitter was updating every minute or two with a photographer posting the story on Facebook (which then propagated to Twitter). The story had trickled out from offbeat/indie to the wider community of photographers — both from Big Fancy Expensive Pros to tiny small-town photographers who also do auto photography and have 29 followers on Twitter.

(Comments shifted a bit at this point, but this is a post about public relations, not comment moderation/community management.)

Traffic spiked at 43,000 unique visitors on Tuesday.
first-spike

That traffic was almost exclusively Facebook/Twitter derived. Close to 9000 people have Liked the post on Facebook.

BONUS: ad sales leads!
At a certain point, I looked at the pages and pages of tweets from photographers and realized we were sitting on a goldmine of advertising leads. I wish I could say I’d thought of that when I first schemed the idea, but I hadn’t. But Tuesday morning I sicced my ad sales team on the Twitter leads, and that turned out VERY well.

Ok. Phase 1: Complete.

PHASE 2: National Publicity Campaign Mode Engage!

I know the value of going unplugged — I’ve talked about it in the media before. This, combined with Offbeat Bride does make me an authority on the subject. (Right? SURE!)

The story is perfect for media pick up: seasonal, timely in terms of the national discussions of technology in our daily lives, a tiny bit controversial (are couples being selfish? are guests being rude?). It’s the perfect story to pitch at a national level.

Here’s who I pitched:

  • First I emailed everyone I know at the Today Show. It’s a long-shot, but worth a try. Leads there were a bit cold: no response from one, and the other basically told me she only wanted mommy-trend pitches.
  • Then I pitched an Office Nomads coworker who works at Wired. She normally covers the science beat, but we’ve chatted about genderqueer formalwear at work, so she’s got a sense for lifestyle topics.
  • Then I pitched the NYTimes lifestyle journalist who interviewed Megan for the “no rings” story. I sent him a quick email pitch, and he said he wanted to talk first about non-cakes at weddings (he thought cupcakes were the latest non-cake trend, to which I rolled my eyes and said OH PLEASE, sooooooo 2007. It’s pies and candy bars, dude). Once we got on the phone and had talked cupcakes, he followed up: “So this unplugged weddings thing. I’m not getting it.” So I gave him the pitch: seasonal, timely, tiny bit controversial. I’ve got a dozen sources I can provide — brides, photographers, officiants. Mostly, I was “excited to get to talk about what this trend suggests about how we’re related technology.” In other words: Hey dude, would you like a nicely framed story to write? I can help you with that. All I ask in return is the chance to be quoted in a national publication as an expert.

Welcome to public relations. Welcome to the way the media words. It’s kind of creepy and crazy, but I get it and can totally be creepy in that kind of crazy way.

Nobody’s picked up the story yet, but this second wave takes a little longer than the first. If I’d been REALLY on top of it, I would have been pitching the story a little earlier — it’s already mid-June! — but whatever: media can move fast for an easy, puffy trend piece.


In conclusion

  1. This is my biggest PR scheme yet.
  2. I like public relations.
  3. Public relations makes me feel like a creepy giggling puppet master. I half love it, and half feel like a conniving monster. In a good way! (Mostly?)

I had this big aha a few years ago that I was going around things the wrong way: I kept pitching news outlets with stories I wanted to write, but I suddenly realized that no, I didn’t need to WRITE the story. I needed to be IN the story. I mean, I do cool shit! I know about cool things! Why be the invisible, opinion-less news voice writing the story, when I could be BE the story?

This is definitely a move in that direction — no longer am I pitching the NYTimes to write the story. I’m pitching the NYTimes to BE the story. It’s a different game, but one I definitely like playing.

In closing, this:

via GIPHY

Comments on How I engineered a viral post

  1. I have not had a media hit nearly so large as that, but do lots of PR wrangling for my events. Totally identify with the conflicting selves within PR. When I do it well, I feel so gross. And so awesome.

  2. I thought that post was genius. I will be linking to it in my FAQ section of my new website. It’s way interesting to read the thought process behind it all too.

  3. It was definitely a great post, and I loved reading this one about it as well. I was totally amazed on how it exploded.. I mean, our wedding photographers even sent an email to ALL THEIR CLIENTS with that post (I actually saw it that way first and only after that on the OBB blog), additionally to promoting it on all their social media. Mind you, our photographers are a tiny two-girl team from Sweden with mostly Swedish customers. Totally genius.

  4. I had my first vaguely successful PR hit yesterday on Mike Adamick’s blog

    For whatever reason, I didn’t feel gross about it, rather completely and utterly elated for a couple of hours. I think maybe because it was an honest (and largely unintentional) piece of PR. I guess I’m also not entirely clear about what constitutes PR and what constitutes empathy.

  5. Yes! I have been stepping up to the plate majorly when it comes to PR (at least for shy, introverted me). I love what you said about being the story, rather than documenting it. Even if you get someone to publish a story you write, people rarely pay attention to who wrote it; they want to know what it’s about and who’s involved in the story itself!

  6. Thank you so much for sharing this. You really are a professional inspiration to me. I run a small 2 person wedding planning business and you make me feel like I can do anything! Keep up the amazing work and I’ll keep sharing on twitter when you ask (and when you don’t ask too).

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