Opinions
Opinions

Guerrilla marketing: it leaves a lasting memory in the mind

We begin to introduce what is meant by “Guerrilla” in the field of marketing with a phrase from Jay Conrad Levinson‘s book, which reflects the right line with which to design an innovative promotional strategy:

“Marketing is a war in which the enemy is the competition and the consumer a land of conquest.”

But what is meant by Guerrilla Marketing?

Guerrilla Marketing is the new frontier of communication that has declared war on old promotional methods created with unconventional, often low-investment weapons and fleeting attacks. This kind of promotional strategy exploits “aggressive” communication methods with the goal of surprising a potential customer and leaving a lasting memory in his or her mind. What needs to be focused on is not only product or service, but the idea itself to be conveyed so that it succeeds in “displacing” the consumer and attracting his or her visual attention. The ultimate goal, then, is to get people talking about you; the more brilliant you are, the more successful you will be. Logically, everything revolves around the creation of an appropriate teaser, an image, movie or slogan, which “piques” the user’s curiosity without revealing everything, leaving the user with the privilege of discovering the meaning.

So, to plan a guerrilla marketing campaign, five factors must be taken into account simultaneously:

  • Intensify direct action. It is in action in the field that you clearly convey the message you want to communicate;
  • the need to make direct action such a striking event as to generate a spontaneous word-of-mouth effect;
  • the real investment is based on time, energy and imagination not on the budget to invest;
  • knowing how to combine
    different marketing strategies
    ;
  • Don’t choose an overly eccentric teaser that risks alienating users.

Creating a marketing campaign with a strong visual and emotional impact is no small task; unfortunately, disastrous failure can lurk around the corner. To neglect any of these aspects would be to penalize the marketing campaign, making it ineffective.

How to recognize a Guerrilla Marketing campaign?

Advertising is not only what appears in newspapers and television, but sometimes, without realizing it, we are catapulted into advertising events through provocative sponsors that stimulate our minds. This modus operandi is pure strategy that integrates corporate image with the staging of pseudo-events, with the aim of self-replicating in the minds of potential consumers. But the extraordinary is not reduced to the single event.

How to spread it? There is no better medium than street billboards and the Web. Indeed, unconventional, capillary-structured marketing must have viral propagation through quick, targeted operations supported by images and videos; the Web lends itself perfectly to this purpose, just do it intelligently, taking advantage of low information costs. It all unfolds in a matter of days or weeks, and what was previously mere word of mouth becomes something static and concrete, giving rise to a group of people who continue to show interest in the initial teaser.

Why do guerrilla marketing?

The decision to intensify its campaign with a more aggressive marketing strategy was dictated by a desire to strengthen complicity with the public by placing creative and surprising elements alongside tradition.

Examples of a Guerrilla Marketing Campaign

To always keep our advertising creativity exercised, here are some examples of Guerrilla Marketing campaigns conducted by two of the world’s biggest brands-McDonalds and Nivea. How can they go unnoticed?

guerrilla-marketing-macdonaldguerrilla-marketing-nivea

The CocaCola brand has always been a spokesman for innovation and originality, in fact, here is a beautiful case of Guerrilla Marketing: by correctly performing the steps on the screen, as a prize, you can receive Coca Cola bottles.

As a sequel to their famous happiness machine, which generated more than 3 million views, Coca-Cola has kicked off “Happiness Truck,” a campaign designed to share personalized cans and bottles with friends.

guerrilla-marketing-coca-cola

Can we say that perhaps the time has come to invade the buildings, streets, squares, and skies of your cities to create wonderful messages? We leave the answer to you but it is time to be more lighthearted, make people smile, surprise and intrigue because, in front of the shelf, that bizarre moment will make you be there and smile in your choice.

Luca Migliorati
CEO & Founder