Guerrilla Marketing Warfare Strategies

In marketing and strategic management, marketing warfare strategies are a type of marketing strategy that uses military metaphor to craft a businesses strategy. See marketing warfare strategies for background and an overview. Guerrilla marketing warfare strategies are a type of marketing warfare strategy designed to wear-down the enemy by a long series of minor attacks. Rather than engage in major battles, a guerrilla force is divided into small groups that selectively attacks the target at its weak points. To be effective, guerrilla teams must be able to hide between strikes. They can disappear into the remote countryside, or blend into the general population. The general form of the strategy is a sequence of attacking, retreating, and hiding, repeated multiple times in series. It has been said that Guerrilla forces never win wars, but their adversaries often lose them.

Strengths

The main strengths of guerrilla strategies are :
  • Because you never attack the enemys main force, you preserve your resources.
  • It is very flexible and can be adapted to any situation, offensive or defensive.
  • It is very difficult to counter with conventional methods.

Guerrilla marketing warfare involves

In the business arena, this involves :
  1. targeted legal attacks on the competition
  2. product comparison advertising
  3. executive raiding
  4. short-term alliances
  5. selective price cuts
  6. deliberate sabotage of the competitions test markets, marketing research, advertising campaigns, or sales promotions
  7. orchestrating negative publicity for a competitor
It can also involve choosing a modest market segment, geographical territory, or niche and defending it. No matter how successful the guerrilla becomes, he/she should never act like a market leader. A guerrilla marketer must be flexible. They must be able to change tactics very quickly : this includes abandoning a market segment, product, product line, brand, business model, or objective. Guerrillas are not ashamed to make a strategic withdrawal. The strategy is suitable when:
  • the target competitor has relatively strong resources and is well able to withstand a head-on attack
  • the attacker has moderately weak resources
The term Guerrilla marketing is sometimes used to refer simply to the use of unorthodox marketing tactics.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
prince leopold, duke of albany
princess helena of waldeck
tetracyclic antidepressant
parallel transport
dioscorus i of alexandria
foreign relations of nauru
alexander cambridge, 1st earl of athlone
edmund wilson
bank of scotland
anne genevieve of bourbon cond
alex garland
list of antidepressants
halifax (bank)
sectional curvature
scalar curvature
wu
biolipid
helene dutrieu
marketing warfare strategies
mojahedin e khalq
offensive marketing warfare strategies
suck on this
defensive marketing warfare strategies
old hungarian script
flanking marketing warfare strategies
cyberport
jonathan pollard
council of the north
richard allen (reverend)
richard v. allen
underwater basket weaving
earl of athlone
british afro caribbean community
crystal cavern
raven oak
ox 5
plf
enochian magick
walls, boxes, & jars
ahmed jibril
jihad ahmed jibril
high magick
principle of indifference
sante kimes