When I started off in DC, you didn't get viral first. You got funny first.
In terms of how I understand the online world, it doesn't just work in the old-fashioned way. You're not going to see billboards and a bunch of commercials. It's all viral.
Going viral isn’t random, magic, or luck. It’s a science.
The more awesome you are, the more emotion you create, the more viral it is.
Helpful is the new viral.
I, 100 percent don't think that's where the American people at, because when there's viral pictures as a baby is in Aleppo with, you know, rubble all over them going viral, and then there are celebrities tweeting why haven't we done nothing about this? And like, oh, there are actually many people for years who've been trying to send aid then and this president won't let us.
If you become a viral star, that is terrific!
Keep making music. . Keep improving your music. . If there's no viral action on your music, you're just not good enough. Don't get mad at the audience, get mad at yourself. Either give up or get better.
There's something about comedy, funny things, that people want to pass them along. Serious things and personal things are much more privately enjoyed. That's why there are not a lot of sad viral videos.
If you are going truly viral, you don't need press. I mean, MySpace grew for a very long time without any press.
Facebook is inherently viral.
All media is moving, at light speed, toward development through viral channels.
I realized that influence was inextricably linked to impact—the more influence you had, the more impact you could create. . . . The ability to make things go viral felt like the closest that we could get to having a human superpower.
Every advance in knowledge and technique is matched by a new kind of death, a new strain. Death adapts, like a viral agent.
Use state-of-the-heart technology online and offline to turn listeners into viral advocates and customers into raving fans.
Today's evangelism is just as likely to take place via chat rooms and viral videos as it is in a personal conversation or a sermon.
Ben Smith's quick-hit campaign 'scoops' are about as viral as cat videos. That fits with Buzzfeed.