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The Guerrilla Marketing Attack
Succeeding with a guerrilla marketing attack
is a very simple seven-step process. Take all seven steps and
watch your profits rise and your competitors cringe. It's not
as hard as you may think to succeed at a guerrilla marketting
attack. And if you launch one properly, you'll find that succeeding
at business is also not as hard as you may have thought.Don't
even think of skipping any of the seven steps to success because
all seven are necessary. We're not talking about playing with
marketing. We're talking about succeeding with marketing.
1. The first step is to everything you can. That means carefully
investigating your market, your product or service, your competition,
your industry and your options in media. What media reach your
target audience? What media makes them respond and buy? Should
you focus on advertising or direct marketing or a combination
of the two? There are answers to these questions and guerrillas
have the knack for coming up with the right answers. As a person
who is already connected to the Internet, you've got a head start
in the research department. There is loads of information online
that can propel you in the direction of success.
2. The second step is to write . Have a meeting. Invite
your key personnel and at least one customer -- because customers
are tuned in to benefits that you may not even consider to be
benefits. Example, my wife patronizes a certain bookstore regularly,
not because of their books, but because of the carrot cake they
serve in their cafe. Once you have a list of your benefits, select
your competitive advantage because that's where you'll hang your
marketing hat. If you haven't got a competitive advantage, you'll
have to create one because you'll need it. After all, anyone can
come up with a benefits list. Figure out why people should patronize
your business instead of that of a competitor.
3. Step number three is to select . In my third guerrilla
marketing online column, I listed an even 100 weapons from which
you may make your selection. My recommendation is to use as many
weapons as you can. Fifty of the hundred weapons are free. After
you've selected the weaponry, put the weapons into priority order.
Next to each weapon, write the name of the person who is in charge
of masterminding the use of the weapon plus the date it will be
launched. Consider each date you write to be a promise you are
making to yourself. Guerrillas do not kid themselves or lie to
themselves, so be realistic. The idea of a guerrilla marketing
attack is to select a lot of weapons, then launch them in slow
motion -- at a pace that feels comfortable financially and emotionally.
My average client takes 18 months to launch an attack. Don't rush.
4. The fourth step, and this is a toughie, is to . The first three steps are
extremely simple compared to this fourth step. Maintaining the
attack means sticking with your plan and your weapons even though
you don't get the instant gratification you want so much. Everyone
wants success to come instantly, but it doesn't happen that way
in real life. The Marlboro Man and Marlboro Country helped make
Marlboro cigarettes the most successfully marketed brand is history.
But after the first year of marketing, they didn't increase sales
one bit for Marlboro. Maintaining the attack made it happen.
5. Step five is to .
Some of your weapons will hit bulls-eyes. Others will miss the
target completely. How will you know which is which? By keeping
track. By asking customers where they heard of you. By finding
out what made them contact you. Keeping track is not easy, but
it is necessary. If you aren't ready to keep track, you aren't
ready to launch your attack in the first place.
6. Step six is to make a . This should be 52
rows long and five columns wide. The first column is called "Week"
-- listing in which week of the 52 weeks you did what you did
in marketing. The second column is called "Thrust" --
referring to the thrust of your marketing that week. What were
you saying? Offering? The third column is called "Media"
and it refers to which media you were using that week. The fourth
column is called "Cost" and lets you project how much
you'll be spending that week. The the fifth column is called "Results"
so you can give a letter grade to the week -- you know, an A,
B, C, D or F. After one year, you compare your calendar to your
sales figures and eliminate all but the A's and B's. It takes
about three years to get a calendar loaded with slam dunks. Once
you have one you'll feel like the client who said of his, "It's
a lot like going to heaven without the inconvenience of dying."
7. The seventh step is to create a Seven steps to succeeding
with a guerrilla marketing attack. If it sounds easy, reread this
column. It works, but it's not easy.
(C)2000 Jay Conrad Levinson
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To find out more about our Guerrilla Marketing
Coaching, Personal Breakthroughs Coaching and Creating Passive
Income Program
call or e-mail us at :
mitch@gmarketingcoach.com
773-209-4255
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www.gmarketingcoach.com
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