When it comes to marketing, guerrillas
become creative in very special ways and they're not the ways that
are demonstrated by most marketing.
Guerrillas view
creativity in marketing the same way that drivers view steering
wheels in their cars. The creativity is supposed to guide the
marketing toward its goal of producing profits just as the steering
wheel is supposed to guide the car toward its goal of arriving safely
at the destination.
It doesn't always work out that way. The
bummer is that although there are tragedies on the highway because
accidents happen, there are tragedies in marketing and none of them
have to happen. Worse yet, they don't even happen by accident People
actually plan, sweat over and focus hard upon marketing that is
headed from the start directly towards disaster.
Creativity
in marketing is very much different from creativity in the arts,
although marketing is as eclectic an art form as has ever been
devised by humankind. Marketing embraces writing, design,
photography, video, special effects, music, dancing, and acting-and
yet its purposes are not those of the arts.
Guerrillas view
marketing with ten insights into marketing creativity that
illuminates the path for them. These insights prevent them from going
over the edge, losing their way or wasting their time and money. Why
wait? Here are the ten insights:
1. Creativity in marketing
should be measured solely by how well it contributes to your overall
profitability. If it helps you sell at profit, it is creative and if
it doesn't, it's not creative. That makes creativity easy to measure.
Awards and compliments have nothing to do with it.
2.
Creativity should always be blended with its ability to withstand
repetition because purchase decisions are made with the unconscious
mind and repetition is the best way to access the unconscious. If
your creative marketing idea can get stronger with repetition, you've
got a winner.
3. Using creativity in marketing that resorts
to humor is like reaching into a bag filled with poisonous snakes.
Not only might you get hurt on your very first time reach into the
bag, but the more you reach the more it works against you because
repetition helps marketing but murders humor.
4. Creativity
in marketing not directed towards motivating a purchase is like
employing a vampire in your marketing. The vampire sucks attention
away from your prime offer, your benefits and your main idea in an
inane attempt to be creative at the expense of your profitability.
5. Creativity should be seen as an opportunity not for show
business but for sell business. Marketing is business far more than
entertainment, and although it may be entertaining, that is not its
prime requirement. It exists mainly to create a desire to buy and not
mainly to entertain.
6. Creativity is a way to implant your
name and not an excuse not to mention your name. Gain awareness and a
crucial share of mind by showing and saying your name creatively,
helping people remember your name the next time they're in the market
for what you sell.
7. Creativity in marketing is the
challenge of demonstrating your benefit in a way that people will
remember. It is important that your prospects remember your name and
equally important to know what makes you special and why they should
own what you are offering.
8. Creativity comes not from
inspiration or even perspiration. It comes from knowledge. The more
knowledge you have, the more creative you can be. You require
knowledge of your benefits, prospects, industry, competition, media
options, and the Internet-for starters.
9. Creativity begins
not with a headline, graphic idea, special effect or jingle; it
begins with an idea. The idea should center around your offer, your
competitive advantage or your main benefit-and it should come singing
clearly through your marketing in any medium.
10. Creativity
of the highest form in marketing has longevity and improves with age.
How long has the Green Giant been ho-ho-ho-ing in his valley? Have
United's skies been friendly? Has the Maytag repairman been lonely?
Great marketing creativity is both flexible and enduring.
* *
* * *
It's a cinch to sit here in my comfy chair typing out a
bunch of insights about how you should be creative. It's easy for me
and hard for you. But hey, I've got my job and you've got yours. I'd
like to tell you that it's going to be simple and that list of
businesses with timeless marketing creativity goes on and on.
But
I'd be lying because it's a short list. Amazingly brief. Most
business owners have this ridiculous notion that their marketing is
supposed to constantly change. And most people who create marketing
have their eyes on their awards wall on not on your bottom line.
So
it's going to be a tough job for you to separate the true creativity
from the pretend creativity. Most marketing you see these days is of
the pretend variety. Still, armed with these insights, the creativity
that you employ will be guerrilla creativity and will lead not down
the garden path but directly to your bank vault.
Jay Conrad
Levinson is the author of the "Guerrilla Marketing" series
of books, now in 34 languages and the best-selling marketing books in
history with over 1,000,000 copies sold. You can call Jay at
800-748-6444, and his website is at http://www.gmarketing.com/.
Comments