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  2. Guerrilla marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerrilla_marketing

    Guerrilla marketing is not exclusive to small companies. For big companies it is a high risk, high reward strategy. When successful, it can capture additional market share, but if it fails it can damage the company's brand image. One successful guerrilla marketing campaign is the Coca-Cola ‘Happiness Machine”.

  3. Attack marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attack_marketing

    Currently, attack marketing is prominently used to promote small businesses as well as larger brands such as Nike, Coca-Cola, Disney, Mars and more. In 1954, the Marlboro Man appears in Marlboro ads, making the company to become the #1 cigarette brand in the US. Guerrilla, ambush and attack marketing became popular in the 1970s.

  4. Jay Conrad Levinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Conrad_Levinson

    The first to use the term "guerrilla marketing" describing 'unconventional' marketing tools used in cases when financial or other resources are limited or non-existent. [7] [8] His first book Guerrilla Marketing was published in 1984 and has been named by Time as one of the top 25 best business books, [9] [10] with over 21 million sold.

  5. Street marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_marketing

    Street marketing is a subset of guerrilla marketing, which is about investing time, energy, and imagination into a business campaign. Guerrilla marketing is popular among large and small businesses alike, as it uses low-cost unconventional communications which can provide a higher impact for a given investment. [2]

  6. Promotional mix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promotional_mix

    Sales Promotion is media and non-media marketing communication used for a predetermined limited time to increase consumer demand, stimulate market demand or improve product availability. Examples include coupons, sweepstakes, contests, product samples, rebates, tie-ins, self-liquidating premiums, trade shows, trade-ins, and exhibitions.

  7. Guerrilla communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerrilla_communication

    Guerrilla communication and communication guerrilla refer to an attempt to provoke subversive effects through interventions in the process of communication. It can be distinguished from other classes of political action because it is not based on the critique of the dominant discourses but in the interpretation of the signs in a different way.