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Advertising Age | April 23, 2009

It’s Getting Harder to Crack the Viral Video Chart

What People Watched the Week of April 13, 2009

Published: April 23, 2009

NEW YORK (Ad Age.com) — Last week, the Ad Age viral video chart illustrated T-Mobile’s staying power — its “Dance” spot that debuted in January was still no 2. This week’s views, at 748,855, were 1% higher than last week’s — good enough to disrupt the three-week chart-topping streak Samsung and its LED-draped sheep enjoyed.

Samsung dropped to no. 2 while Burger King’s ode to SpongeBob and Cadbury’s “Eyebrow Dance” hung onto the three and four spots, respectively. But new to the chart is a video promoting Head tennis rackets and starring Novak Djokovic (and his chest), Microsoft’s “Laptop Hunters” campaign and the “Fast Food Folk Song,” created as part of a Mountain Dew Baja Blast promotion.

The data, as always, is compiled by Visible Measures and includes the most recent week’s views — not total views over the entire life of a campaign. One change over the first three charts? The threshold to break into the top 10 is higher this week, at 271,985 views. Perhaps it’s a one-week anomaly, perhaps it’s due to increased usage of online video or social-sharing tools. Regardless, we’ll be watching to see if that trend continues in the weeks to come.

AdAge [link]

Source: Visible Measures

*The Visible Measures Top 10 Viral Video Ad Campaigns Chart focuses on brand-driven viral video ads that appear on online-video-sharing destinations. Each campaign is measured on a True Reach™ basis, which includes viewership of both brand-syndicated video clips and viewer-driven social video placements. The data are compiled using the Visible Measures Viral Reach Database, a constantly growing repository of analytic data on more than 100 million internet videos across more than 150 video-sharing destinations.

Note: This analysis does not include Visible Measures’ paid-placement (i.e., overlays, pre-/mid-/post-roll) performance data or video views on private sites. This chart does not include movie trailers, video-game campaigns or public service announcements. View-count results are incremental by week.

**Indicates percent change in views compared with the same period the week before.

To notify Visible Measures of an upcoming video ad campaign, or for an end-to-end assessment of your campaign’s overall performance, please contact Visible Measures directly.