Word of mouth
Word of mouth is spoken, rather than written, communication. It is the passing of
information by verbal means, especially recommendations, but also general information, in an informal, person-to-person manner, rather than by
mass media,
advertising, organized
publication, or traditional
marketing.
Word of mouth
promotion is highly valued by marketers. It is felt that this form of communication has valuable source credibility. People are more inclined to believe word of mouth promotion than more formal forms of promotion because the communicator is unlikely to have an ulterior motive (ie.: they are not out to sell you something). Also people tend to believe people that they know. In order to manufacture word of mouth communications, marketers use
publicity techniques.
A very successful word of mouth promotion creates a
buzz. A buzz is a highly intense and interactive form of word of mouth. Word of mouth is essentially a linear process with information passing from one individual to another, then to another, etc. A marketer has successfully created a buzz when the interactions are so intense that the information moves in a matrix pattern rather than a linear one. Everyone is talking about the topic.
There is some overlap in meaning between word of mouth and the following:
rumour,
gossip,
innuendo, and
hearsay; however the negative connotations of these words are not included in the meaning of
word of mouth. See also
grapevine.
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See also: Marketing, promotion, Speech, verbal, unwritten, publicity
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