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Gorilla Marketing
Products and services have to find customers in a
fiercely competitive market. Large corporations have large
advertising budgets and big marketing teams but small businesses
may only have a small budget and they have to be a bit more
imaginative. It's not just a matter of cost however, but of
results and the recent trend for gorilla marketing is proving
successful in many cases.
Conventional TV campaigns,
billboards and press advertisements are all expensive and the
public is used to them and may have become desensitized to them.
Niche marketing or aiming at a target audience is the modern way
of doing things, aided by technology. The younger generation is
particularly receptive to different sorts of promotions. Gorilla
marketing, sometimes referred to as buzz marketing or stealth
marketing, has also been taken up by bigger organizations.
This sort of method puts an emphasis on building a
relationship that feels personal to the customer. Some tactics
are inexpensive or free and a lot of companies have come to
value word of mouth recommendations. The Internet plays a big
part in this and potential consumers of a product may not even
realise that they have been targeted in this way. Chat rooms,
blog pages, messages and chain email are all portals for
promotion. Sending text messages to cell phones is another
method. The act of sending personal messages to a bluetooth has
been dubbed 'bluejacking'.
Communication has always been
the tool of publicity departments and it's easier than ever for
people to share information, opinions and ideas. With the
Internet, it is literally a global market. Gorilla marketing
takes note of the fact that families have fragmented as far as
their leisure time is concerned. Instead of gathering round the
TV together, families are apt to be doing their own thing in
different parts of the house. Mom may be watching her soap in
the living room, Dad is listening to his baseball game on the
radio in his den and their teenage kids are social networking in
their bedrooms.
There are other ways besides high tech
solutions to get the message across. Urban dwellers are familiar
with sticker campaigns. They pop up everywhere and sometimes in
unexpected places. They may be in subway stations, telephone
booths or stuck in the cab of a truck. Advertisements are
printed on receipts or on the reverse of bus tickets. The art of
gorilla marketing is making use of the everyday things that we
all take for granted. A slogan on a T-shirt is often a walking
advertisement.
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