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(This
article originally appeared in the November, 2002 edition
of the Northeast Pennsylvania Business Journal)
"Guerilla Marketing" claims more than one definition.
But for our purposes here, unlike "conventional"
marketing, let's say that "guerrilla" practices:
are off the beaten path
jump out at you when you might be
least suspecting,
just
like the guerilla warrior
are typically less costly
might not make it into the first few
chapters of
a classic
textbook on marketing
allow the small-to-medium competitor
to level the playing
field
against the big-bucks/deep-pockets marketing bullies.
It would be great, wouldn't it, to organize these guerilla
practices into business categories and channels of distribution?
But, there isn't enough space available here and, besides,
such tidy arrangements don't fit the guerilla spirit, do they?
So, category and channel aside, here's some ammo in case you
find some day you need to "go guerilla":
1. "The Toss"
I met a car salesman once who said he never missed a high
school football game in his community—Friday night or Saturday.
He'd sit in the bleachers, his heavy weather coat pockets
stuffed with business cards. After every score, no matter
which side cheered, he'd toss two handsful of his cards up
in the air, confetti-style, spreading the word about his name
and business. I love that guy! This is community-level guerilla
marketing in a simple yet theatrical way.
2. "The Magnet"
Speaking of cars, if you use your car as part of your business,
especially where delivery or service are concerned, the magnetic
pliable sign, attached to the car doors, both driver and passenger
side, is an effective, yet relatively inexpensive way to convey
reminders of your business identity at the point of contact.
Quick-print shops and ad specialty houses are good sources.
A more costly but popular alternative is "the Wrap"wrapping
your message in full-color vinyl around your car, truck, even
busses. The Wrap turns any vehicle into a mobile billboard.
3. "Burma Shave" Signs
Still out on the road, taking aim at the driving public, there
is an opportunity for the guerilla marketer to emulate the
great technique of the Burma Shave® shaving cream signs.
That is, small road sign billboards (really yardstick-sized
horizontal signs on tomato stakes) in serial fashion, delivering
a limerick, or other memorable multi-part message about a
product or service. I saw a major discount store chain deliver
reminders about a clearance sale at their local outlet via
this technique at on and off-ramps to the major traffic artery
in its community. Drivers travel these ramps at slow enough
speeds to read these messages. They're smaller, more intimate,
and much less costly than traditional billboard advertising.
And unexpected, in the true guerilla spirit.
4. The Indoor Billboard
Taking a cue from conventional marketers and their large-format
outdoor advertising aimed at automotive traffic, some smaller
organizations, wishing to communicate with their employees
in unconventional ways, put the "indoor billboard"
to work. These messages are located in hallways, in employee
lounges, in thoroughfares of factory or warehouse, any place
where employees move or congregate. Sometimes the message
is workplace safety. Sometimes it's a reminder of employee
benefits. Or any message that's near and dear to the employer.
No matter, it's an easy-to-use, relatively inexpensive employee
communications tool.
5. In the Restroom
Working with what you'd have to call a "captive audience,"
a variation on the Indoor Billboard is a message placed in
the restroom. A local utility company used strategically placed
signage in its employee restrooms to remind its workforce
of key topics/issues important in that workplace. And, I've
seen restaurateurs use the restroom as a place in which to
remind patrons about menu items, beverage specials and upcoming
entertainment offerings, too.
6. At the Workstation
One of my favorite guerilla devices is an ad specialty item
placed on the workstation desktop. Showing off your company
name and other "call-to-action" information, this
weighted plastic accessory is intended as a reference document
holder for the worker at the computer. But it also doubles
as a "cable caddy" for laptop users who are plugging/unplugging
cables at both ends of the workday. All the while, your message
is there at the workstation, where there is a singular environment
for sending/receiving messages.
7. The Sandwich Board
At the special event, or wherever there's a crowd, you have
a splendid opportunity to remind passersby of who you are
and what you do. And, sometimes, in this free-for-all atmosphere,
the guerilla marketer is truly in his/her element! The itinerant
"sandwich board," i.e., the human-borne, A-frame
panels, fore and aft, and connected by shoulder straps, conveys
your reminder to the crowd. "Eat at Joe's Place"
is how this venerable message technique is most often recalled
in the cartoons. But the sandwich board is a tool which can
bring your message to where the crowd is (kind of a poor man's
Piper Cub aircraft, trailing an "Eat at Joe's Place"
banner in front of the beach and the army of swimmers/sunbathers
found there). I have seen business-to-business marketers use
the Sandwich Board at trade shows to drum up visitors for
their exhibits.
8. The Hand-Controlled Blimp
You've seen these miniature helium-inflated, remote-controlled
aircraft at sporting events ( a poor man's Goodyear Blimp).
You can get them at Radio Shack, or via mail order catalogs.
And you have to add your own custom identity to the "inflatable."
But, again, at special events, or wherever there is a crowd,
these devices give you a means to grab attention in a novel
and memorable way.
9. The "Leveler"
The Web, they say, is the great "leveler" among
business competitors, enabling a small- to medium-size business
to come across as the equal of the much larger companies in
its category. That is true, to a degree. But, we have seen
enough poor Webmanship among companies large and small to
make this comparison less valid—and less valuable—than
it should be. The greatest leveler, in the next five years,
it says here, will be the videophone. Long a vision of science
fiction, but still to be delivered by the telecommunications
industry, the videophone will allow the smallest company to
come across just as well as the largest company. "Stage
presence" and sense of theatre will determine who does,
and who does not, impress the listener/viewer as professional
and authoritative and trustworthy on this small screen. So,
guerilla warriors, get thee to a mirror, and be ready for
the videophone revolution that will enable you to out-finesse
your clumsy, self-conscious and not-ready-for-prime-time competitors!
(A New Age of Personal Grooming may dawn as well.)
10. The In-person Visit
Perhaps the guerilla marketer's most lethal weapon is the
good old-fashioned, in-person, in-the-flesh, up-close-and-personal
sales call!
In today's wired age of doing business from a distance, the
failure of salespeople to "press the flesh" with
the customer may be the biggest sin of all. Remember the old
United Airlines TV commercial where the world-weary manager
enters the conference room to report that a longtime client
just fired the company, and announces, "People, from
now on things are going to be different"? He then distributes
airline tickets all the way around the table, exhorting his
comrades to restore the personal contact to their business
relationships. I have always wondered, in this day of distance-marketing,
why that airline did not "dust off" that commercial
to revive business air travel. Turns out a competing airline
did just "dust off" that idea. In their TV spot,
a business team is gathered 'round the conference room table
and one of them is unable to reach Gridley to plug him in
to the meeting via teleconference. That's because Gridley
has jetted into town that morning, and, at that very minute,
he is walking through the conference room door to join his
teammates "live" and "real-time." What
an odd way of doing business! And what a fearsome weapon for
the guerilla marketer!
For further study: Guerilla Marketing, Secrets for Making
Big Profits from Your Small Business, Jay Conrad Levinson,
Houghton Mifflin.
Peter
Cronk, Managing Partner of Fred Riger Advertising Agency,
Inc., keeps a moth-eaten set of camouflage fatigues in the
attic.
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