Advertisment

Guerrilla technique for your Small Business visibility

author-image
CIOL Bureau
Updated On
New Update

BANGALORE, INDIA: Getting their business and products known is a big challenge for small and medium enterprises. Advertising can be a remedy, but limited funds is again an obstacle that prevents them from spending money like it's going out of style. With funds tight, every rupee matters, and everything has to be done while remaining within a small budget. Here, going guerrilla can be the perfect solution.

That's how guerrilla marketing works. The concept, introduced by Jay Conrad Levinson in his 1984 book "Guerrilla Marketing", refers to an unconventional system of promotions to reach target customers. And most importantly, it's a low-cost strategy. In fact, the author was inspired to write the book after one of his students approached him with a pretty straightforward question: ". . . we have good ideas, but we do not know beans about marketing. Is there a book you can recommend for people with big dreams but empty bank accounts?"

Advertisment

Also read: iPad - A Whole New World on the Go

That question still troubles many SMEs, and I think guerrilla marketing, which was once conceived with small businesses' limitation of cash in mind, can still be a potential and cost-effective promotion strategy for SMEs, particularly those which are yet to establish their identity, striving to get their business known, or doing business in a market overcrowded with competition. No need to go for too expensive newspaper ads, neither to worry about other competing campaigns, and still your ad campaign can be everyone's hot talking point.

So, what are the rules! Unfortunately, no set parameters. Levinson's book includes hundreds of such "weapons", and in addition, the concept has evolved with time to add many more non-traditional media tools and mediums, such as Reverse Graffiti, Viral marketing, Presence marketing, and Undercover marketing, but still it's difficult to give a comprehensive list as the very nature of guerrilla marketing demands thinking out of the box. The more novel, the better it is; the more surprising, the more lethal it is.

Having said that, I don't dismiss other promotional tools for SMEs, but when it comes to cost-effectiveness, guerrilla marketing is certainly one of the few choices left for them. This strategy relies on creativity rather than a huge amount of cash or the expertise of a promotion guru. Neither do you need to work your fingers to the bone. Just think something unusual and unpredictable that can work for your business, dare to break the boundaries – and there's always a way to do it better find it.

Source: www.smetimes.in