Guerrilla marketing 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