Neo Guerilla: 4 Fresh and Novel Approaches to Guerilla Marketing

The continuing evolution of media consumption has made it increasingly challenging for an advertiser to both capture and hold an audience's attention.

"A decade or two ago, media was relatively consolidated; advertisers knew they could reach a significant segment of their targeted audience via newspapers and television commercials, which almost seems quaint today," says advertising entrepreneur Patrick Walsh. "We live in what academics call the Age of Choice, where reaching a broad audience and funneling their attention to a business has become trickier than ever."

In the past, guerilla marketing - the unconventional and creative use of traditional marketing tools like stickers, print ads, and billboards - has been an effective means of jolting public awareness. Today, however, innovation in guerilla techniques is essential. From flash mobs to viral marketing campaigns, successful advertising requires new twists and surprising uses of old tools and strategies.

Walsh shares some of the latest cutting-edge ideas, which - just like the "Mad Men" campaigns of old - are as much art as advertising.

Patrick Walsh is the CEO of AirSign Inc., (www.airsign.com), which, through the use of giant full-color airplane and helicopter banners, skywriting, digital night signs, and blimps, produces show-stopping campaigns. Walsh is a veteran entrepreneur.

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