skills/playbook-word-of-mouth-strategy/SKILL.md
Builds a structured Word-of-Mouth (WOM) marketing programme for a client — covering advocate identification, Gladwell influencer taxonomy, superfan cultivation, referral loop design, cause-related WOM campaigns, and tracking methodology. Distinct from 08-influencer-marketing-strategy (paid creator partnerships) and playbook-ugc-strategy (content collection). Invoke when a client wants to activate organic advocates — superfans, community leaders, and trusted referrers — to generate authentic, unpaid word-of-mouth at scale. Particularly effective in Uganda and East Africa, where community trust is the primary purchase driver and WOM through church networks, local business associations, boda-boda groups, and market trader networks delivers disproportionate commercial results.
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Produce a complete Word-of-Mouth marketing programme. Apply Uganda/East Africa context throughout. Default to Uganda unless the client specifies otherwise. Use British English throughout. All objectives must be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound).
This skill addresses organic advocacy only. For paid creator partnerships, use 08-influencer-marketing-strategy. For UGC collection systems, use playbook-ugc-strategy. For community trust sequencing, use framework-community-trust.
SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.Ask for all of the following before generating any deliverable:
In Uganda and across East Africa, community trust precedes purchase. Advertising is viewed with scepticism; recommendation by a known and respected person is the dominant decision-making signal. This is structural, not anecdotal: household spending decisions are routinely deferred until a trusted contact has validated the choice (Chaffey, 2024). The Like-Know-Trust framework (framework-community-trust) maps the relationship arc every customer travels — WOM is the mechanism that accelerates movement through that arc at scale, without proportional cost.
Under the POEM model (Paid/Owned/Earned), WOM sits in the Earned channel — the hardest to manufacture and the highest in credibility. A single recommendation from a trusted community figure can outperform weeks of paid advertising in the same market.
WOM marketing is not passive. It is a designed system: identify the right talkers, give them a compelling topic, equip them with tools, show up in the conversations, and measure the result. This playbook applies the five-pillar WOM framework (Word of Mouth Marketing Association, as synthesised by Funk, 2011) throughout.
Apply all five pillars to the client's programme. Each pillar produces a specific output that feeds into the execution plan.
Pillar 1 — Talkers: Who will talk about this brand?
Talkers are people predisposed to recommend. They already believe in the product or category. Identify three to five talker segments for this client:
For each talker segment, document: estimated size, primary communication channel (WhatsApp, Facebook, in-person), and current relationship with the brand.
Pillar 2 — Topics: What gives people a reason to talk?
Generic products do not get talked about. Identify the specific talking points that make this brand remarkable, memorable, or emotionally shareable:
Produce a shortlist of three to five core talking points for this client. These inform all advocate briefing materials.
Pillar 3 — Tools: What enables and amplifies the conversation?
Talkers need tools to share easily. Friction kills WOM. Identify and build the sharing toolkit:
Pillar 4 — Taking Part: How does the brand join its own conversations?
A brand that ignores conversations about itself loses credibility and advocacy momentum. Define the engagement protocol:
meta-social-listening)playbook-crisis-communications and playbook-reputation-managementPillar 5 — Tracking: How does the brand know WOM is working?
Define specific tracking mechanisms before launch. See Section 7 for full tracking methodology.
Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point (2000) identifies three human types responsible for the spread of ideas: Connectors, Mavens, and Salespeople. In East African WOM strategy, this taxonomy maps directly onto community structures. Apply it to identify and engage the right advocates in the right way.
Connectors
Connectors know an unusually large number of people across diverse social groups. Their power is breadth, not depth. In Uganda, connectors include:
How to engage Connectors: Prioritise reach-enabling tools — pre-written WhatsApp forwards, shareable social content, and referral links they can distribute without effort. Connectors do not need to be convinced; they need to be equipped. Recognise them publicly. Give them first access to new products or announcements so they become the messenger. Do not burden them with detailed brand briefings — keep the message short, clear, and easy to pass on.
Mavens
Mavens are trusted experts whose opinion people actively seek before making decisions. Their power is depth of credibility, not breadth of reach. In Uganda, Mavens include:
How to engage Mavens: Educate before asking for advocacy. Provide genuine product knowledge, samples, or trial access. Mavens will not advocate for something they have not personally verified. Respect their credibility — never script them. A Maven who endorses authentically is far more valuable than one who recites a brand message. Ask for honest feedback as well as advocacy; Mavens respond to being treated as experts.
Salespeople
Salespeople are natural persuaders. They are enthusiastic, energetic, and convincing. They do not merely share information — they actively convince others. In Uganda, Salespeople include:
How to engage Salespeople: Give them a stage and a story. Salespeople thrive on enthusiasm — give them a narrative they can perform, not just a fact sheet. A referral programme with visible rewards suits Salespeople. Public recognition (naming them in posts, celebrating their results) motivates continued advocacy. Create a formal or semi-formal ambassador role so they have an identity to embody.
Identifying advocate type: For each candidate advocate, ask: Do they have broad reach across many groups (Connector)? Do people seek them out for advice before deciding (Maven)? Do they spontaneously enthuse and recruit others (Salesperson)? Most people lean toward one type. Engage accordingly.
Superfans are existing customers with a disproportionate emotional investment in the brand. They are the highest-yield WOM assets because their advocacy is intrinsic and authentic.
Finding superfans:
Surprise and delight:
The most powerful superfan activation tactic requires no announcement. Identify five to ten top fans and deliver an unexpected reward:
The unexpectedness is the mechanism. A surprise reward generates an emotional response that the customer shares. Do not announce the programme in advance — this converts genuine delight into a reward-seeking queue.
Building a superfan inner circle:
Once five to fifteen superfans have been identified and activated, build a structured inner circle:
Long-term relationship maintenance:
A referral programme is a designed system: a clear incentive, a low-friction sharing mechanism, and a defined trigger moment. Without all three, referrals remain accidental.
Core mechanics:
EA-appropriate referral mechanics:
UGX incentive benchmarks by customer level:
| Customer tier | Referral reward (referrer) | Referral discount (new customer) | |---|---|---| | Low-value purchase (under UGX 20,000) | UGX 2,000–5,000 MM credit or equivalent discount | 10% off first purchase | | Mid-value purchase (UGX 20,000–100,000) | UGX 5,000–15,000 MM credit or equivalent product | 10–15% off first purchase | | High-value purchase (over UGX 100,000) | UGX 15,000–50,000 MM credit or service upgrade | Free consultation, trial, or delivery |
Calibrate incentives to customer lifetime value. Over-rewarding low-value referrals distorts economics; under-rewarding high-value advocates wastes the most productive loop.
Customers share campaigns they believe in. A brand associated with a cause that genuinely resonates with its community earns a qualitatively different type of advocacy — one motivated by values, not incentives.
EA-appropriate cause categories:
Designing a cause-related WOM campaign:
The sharing trigger: Customers share cause campaigns because doing so publicly signals their own values. The share is self-expressive, not commercial. Design the campaign visual and caption so that sharing it makes the customer look good to their network — this is the emotional mechanism.
Do not pay customers to share cause content. Paid sharing of cause campaigns destroys credibility for both the customer and the brand.
These are distinct strategies. Confusing them leads to misallocated effort and disappointment.
Viral content:
WOM seeding:
When to pursue each:
Pursue viral content strategy when reach is the constraint and budget exists for content production. Use playbook-viral-content-design for execution. Pursue WOM seeding when trust and conversion are the constraints, or when the community is defined and reachable through existing networks. Most Uganda/EA clients benefit more from WOM seeding than viral content — their category decisions are community-driven, not mass-media-driven.
Both can coexist: a piece of content that goes viral is more durable if it lands in communities already seeded with WOM advocates who can anchor the conversation.
WOM without tracking is guesswork. Build measurement into the programme from day one.
Online referral tracking:
meta-utm-tracking): utm_source=wom&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=[advocate-name]Offline and WhatsApp referral tracking:
WhatsApp dark social: WhatsApp forwards are "dark social" — they pass through private channels that are invisible to standard analytics. To estimate reach:
Net Promoter Score (NPS): NPS is the single most efficient WOM health metric. Ask customers: "On a scale of 0–10, how likely are you to recommend [brand] to a friend or colleague?" Calculate: % Promoters (9–10) minus % Detractors (0–6). A positive NPS indicates a WOM-ready customer base; a negative NPS signals that WOM seeding will surface negative sentiment. Resolve experience problems before scaling WOM. Survey quarterly.
Brand mention monitoring:
Cross-reference meta-social-listening for full brand monitoring setup. For WOM specifically, track:
Reporting cadence:
Output is high quality when it meets all of the following:
framework-community-trust, meta-social-listening, meta-utm-tracking, 08-influencer-marketing-strategy, and playbook-ugc-strategy without duplicating their contenttools
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