Let Your Imagination Take Off
A successful guerrilla marketing campaign takes effort, not cash.
By Al Lautenslager
| January 24, 2005
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/marketing/guerillamarketing/article193468.html
Guerrilla marketing is often described as marketing using time,
energy, imagination and information vs. your hard-earned profits.
One of the key words in this definition is the word
"imagination." I run across many people that hear the
many stories about guerrilla tactics, and they always say
"What a great imagination...That must be guerrilla
marketing." To guerrilla marketers, that's music to their
ears.
Using your imagination doesn't cost anything. True, it costs
you a lot of time, blood, sweat and tears to get you to the point
of being able to use your imagination based on your education and
experiences, but no money is taken out of your checking account to
pay for an imaginative idea.
Webster defines imagination as: "The ability to confront
and deal with reality by using the creative power of the mind;
resourcefulness; an unrealistic idea or notion; a fancy; a plan or
scheme." Let's look at some unrealistic ideas or schemes
that were hatched by a little bit of imagination:
- I passed a realtor's sign the other day, and the
agent's name was Lester. His website was www.lesterthelister.com. Sounds kind of corny, but it
will get noticed, and people will remember it.
- Henderson's Appliance Store in St. Louis was in business
for more than 40 years and needed some revitalization. They had
never had a tag line. Since they sold refrigerators, grills,
washers and dryers, they dug deep on how they could convey to the
marketplace what they really do. The resulting tag line now used in
all their marketing is: "We cook it, we chill it, we clean
it."
- Here's one any company can use. Imagine (there's that
word again) passing out fliers for your local high school football
team's game with "Go Wildcats" (or whatever their
mascot is) on one side. Can you imagine every fan standing up
cheering and waving their free flier? On the reverse side, your
logo and phone number appears. Every time the flier is displayed,
the fan stares right at your company information. Sure, you have to
pay to get the fliers printed, but in the total scheme of things,
imagination is what generated awareness for the business on the
reverse side. That's guerrilla marketing.
Sometimes imagination leads to outrageousness. That's OK.
That's what gets noticed, and that's what gets remembered.
Best of all--and consistent with guerrilla marketing--it usually
doesn't cost a whole lot. Imagine (yes, I repeated it on
purpose) a mailing that comes as a bank money bag, a printed paper
bag or the lumpy mail pack that has a silver platter in it with a
sales letter to correspond. These are all low-cost tactics that a
customer and prospect will see and eventually act upon or
remember.
As you can see, a creative idea can go a long way. People many
times will talk about the cool idea more than the product, but of
course the product is always mentioned. It's almost like people
go around saying, "I wish I would have thought of that,"
and they start thinking of imaginative ideas for their products or
services.
Brainstorm how you can use your imagination to market your
product or service. As they say with anything related to your
imagination, "You are only limited by your
imagination."
Imagination doesn't cost anything; that's one of the
primary components of guerrilla marketing. Imagination is one of
those things that can make your marketing fun. Involve others.
Involve customers and prospects. Break out of your typical mode of
doing business. That will definitely get you noticed.
Put some energy and enthusiasm behind your idea, and you'll
soon have your market talking about your imagination and,
eventually, your products and services.
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