The results in its case were a $232 million opening weekend, a total of one billion dollars in revenue by year's end, and the rank of #2 highest grossing film of all time. Cameron's $500 million act of hubris has paid off. Here's an outline of the social media moves Avatar's team made to achieve success.
The Basics: Facebook, Twitter, MySpace
Facebook's updated Page features make it the place to be for brands seeking exposure. The site allows brands to push updates to fans. Those fans see the updates in their personal news feeds, and they can then share them with others, just like on Twitter. Avatar's Facebook Page is also where the MTV-hosted live webcast was hosted — more on that later.
Reinventing the Movie Trailer Online
Granted, Avatar wasn't the first film to take its trailer in a new direction for the web. It actually wasn't first at any of these things, but an expansive strategy combining many of the best existing ideas was what made the film's social media campaign a success.
It started out with something a lot of movies do now: an Apple trailer debut, announced on Twitter. Anticipation was high enough that the servers struggled to get the video out to everyone who wanted it. A second trailer rolled out a month later. The web trailers gained additional buzz when fans remixed them and mashed them up with other movies, something that the folks behind the Avatar marketing machine smartly didn't interfere with.
It was yet another trailer that impressed us the most, though. An interactive trailer was presented as an Adobe Air application. It required a download, but it was worth it for Avatar fans. They could see featured content and they could read the latest social media updates about the movie from within the trailer. The stunt got press coverage and word-of-mouth buzz.
The Facebook and MTV Webcast
On December 3, MTV.com put together an Facebook-hosted, LG-sponsored webcast called "Avatar Live." Director James Cameron, producer Jon Landau, and stars Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana were interviewed by MTV News' Josh Horowitz, but the questions were submitted by fans in the days leading up to the event.
The 30-minute interview might have been the most glamorous webcast to date; you just don't see that many huge Hollywood names sit down to take questions from Internet fans all at once. Though community engagement from a director at that level is quite rare, we were reminded of Peter Jackson's almost-daily video updates from the sets of The Lord of the Rings.
In both cases, people who didn't know much about the films tuned in and were sold on them. Existing fans became more passionate about spreading the word and showing up on opening night.
Broadcasting the Premiere Live On Ustream
The broadcast's sponsor was MySpace, so it reached an audience that might have been missed on Facebook. Fans could watch the video on the film's MySpace page in addition to the Ustream website. The red carpet premiere came a week before the film hit theaters, so this was just one more way to generate buzz and get press in the final days leading up to the movie's release.