Explosion Marketing Verses MicroExplosion Marketing
Monday, August 18th, 2008A little over two years ago when I was starting my blog I came up with the idea of calling it “microexplosion” it was all based on the idea that all the new media tools are simply spark creators and that if the goal of marketing/PR/advertising is to create ideas that catch fire, then leveraging the new spark creators would be worth looking into. The funny thing about a spark, is that it doesn’t seem like a big deal all by itself. After all, a spark vanishes in an instant. You don’t even feel it if it touches your skin…but given the enough time and the right circumstances a spark can turn into a blazing fire.
Traditional marketers don’t have time for sparks. They want something that goes boom. It needs to be big and it needs to be loud. They want everyone to know when it ignites. Their entire professional worth is based on the bigness and the loudness of the boom. They get paid to make big booms.
Social media marketers don’t need a big boom. They have all these little spark starters. They can go over here and create a spark and then go over there and create a spark and then discover another area and create a spark and in the end they step back and see some of those sparks turn into tiny flames. Those flames can turn into small fires and those fires grow and can go on blazing for a long time.
Think of it like this…explosion fires are quickly put out, but fires that start with sparks aren’t. Explosion fires are quickly discovered and dealt with but spark fires go unnoticed at first but when they are noticed they’re already spreading rapidly. That’s why forest fires are such a big deal. They can take weeks to put out.
If you’re marketing with explosions you have to keep making it bigger and louder just to make sure someone notices your explosion among all the other explosion marketers. If you’re marketing with sparks, you just have to find the right scenario for your spark to ignite.

