By now, most have heard of the greatest festival that never was, the Fyre Festival.
The event promised a luxury music festival with a celebrity-like experience at Pablo Escobar’s private island.
The luxury experience turned into a nightmare for many attendees that summer.
If you are interested in what went wrong, watch the Netflix documentary Fyre: The greatest party that never happened or the Hulu Documentary Fyre Fraud.
Although the Fyre Festival did not deliver on its promises, there’s one thing it did do right and did it very well – marketing the event.
Here are five ways the Fyre Festival successfully marketed the event;
1. Define your target audience: Fyre Festival was created for the wealthy millennials. Individuals who were willing to spend thousands of dollars on tickets to be part of the most exclusive, and luxurious music festival ever organized.
The event organizers, Billy McFarland and Ja Rule knew exactly who their target audience was and how to appeal to that demographic. They used social proof, storytelling, and scarcity as the key elements to promote the festival.
2. Use Social Proof: Social proof is a term psychologist Dr. Rober Cialdini coined in his 1984 book, Influence: The psychology of persuasion. Social proof is one of the six fundamental principles of persuasion. It can be used to influence people’s actions.
Cialdini writes:
“The principle of social proof says so: The greater the number of people who find an idea correct, the more the ideas will be correct…We will use the actions of others to decide on proper behavior for ourselves, especially when we view those others as similar to ourselves.”