Promo - January 2008 - (Page 38) Continued from page 37 more beer by getting people to try their beer, engendering loyalty to their beer, and getting the companies who sell their beer to promote it more than their competitors. Their job is to connect with target markets—internal, external, and intermediary. Sports doesn’t buy the beer, the fans buy the beer. Football is simply a means to an end—a tool—and that’s it. How they, and we, use that tool is what separates good from great sponsors. I find ambush marketing fascinating. All the drama, paranoia, and subterfuge are very entertaining to watch and, of course, gossip about at industry events—at least if you’re not the one being ambushed. But one of my favorite things about ambush is that it’s so much fun to argue about. Both sides—pro- and antiambush—have excellent points. So good, in fact, that I wouldn’t have any problem vigorously defending either point of view. At the outset, I will admit that some of these arguments contradict each other. Whether you want to harness the opportunity or defend against opportunists, it requires an understanding of both sides. The case against ambush Ambush is unethical. Ambush is immoral. Yeah, yeah, yeah. A fat lot of good those arguments have done in stopping it happening! And yet, those are the arguments we hear the most. If we want to stop ambush from happening, guilt hasn’t worked and it isn’t going to. Instead, we need to talk strategy. We need to make the business case against ambush marketing. There are a lot of strategic reasons not to ambush. When a sponsor makes a sponsorship investment, they are investing in potential, not results. They get results through what they do with the invest- ment (i.e., how they leverage it). One of the key factors in whether a sponsor is ambushable is whether they have effectively leveraged their investment. If they have succeeded in making their brand and the sponsorship meaningful to their target market, they will be difficult (but not impossible) to ambush. If not, they are a sitting duck. But this raises the question: if a sponsor isn’t leveraging well, and therefore isn’t getting good results, then why bother? In that case, the sponsor doesn’t need undermining, because they are their own worst enemy. Save your money, time, and effort. Mainstream media love to write about ambush. Most business-to-business media do, too. It’s salacious in a way that business stories rarely are, and very easy to spin into some kind of morality play. Your target markets are going to see this coverage. Do you know what the impact will be? Will the positive you may gain from ambushing outweigh the potential negative of being pilloried in USA Today or the Financial Times? Whether or not the coverage has any meaningful repercussions on how the public views you, one thing is certain: unless you are working for a Richard Branson–style rebel, you are risking a senior executive freak out. Do you really want that? If you ambush, you are making a conscious decision to play the competition’s game. Not only are you offering similar brands—you are competitors, after all—but you are choosing to forgo the unique selling point that creating your own sponsorship would give you in favour of sharing the exact same sponsorship platform with a competitor. Is it really going to be better for you to pretend to be involved with something your competition sponsors rather than to be involved with an event that is exactly right for you? Play your own game. Invest your time and money in sponsorship activities that enhance your unique selling points, not ambushes that highlight your similarity to another brand. Okay, let’s say that everything is looking good for an ambush of a big event and you start your ambush activities a few months out. Assuming that the sponsor is a reasonable fit with the event to start with, all it will take is for them to implement some meaningful leverage and the effectiveness of your ambush will plummet. If this happens, are the results you get from the ambush still going to be worth the potential media backlash? All the hard work? The headaches? Are you willing to risk it? The basic premise of ambush marketing is that you are not partners with the event. Plenty of ambushers have shown that it is possible to gain marketing value from an event without being partners, but if you look at all that you are giving up, is it really worth it? If you think sponsorship is hard work, try ambush. If you want to do an ambush that works, not only do you have to do virtually everything involved in a sponsorship, you also have to create relevance and benefits out of thin air, manage consumer, shareholder, and staff perceptions, and manage and measure the activity. Plus, you have to do all of this under the watchful eyes of probably hostile media. If you still think ambush is a great idea, you really need to take this on board: most ambushes don’t work. They are done the wrong way, for the wrong reasons, in the wrong environment, and the results are a total waste of time, energy, money and potential. The case for ambush Ambushes that work have the same underlying structure and work within the same type of environment. If those 38 January 2008 / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / Promo http://www.promomagazine.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - January 2008 Promo - January 2008 Contents Editor's Note Viral But Virtuous Slap Shot Power Chords Tuning In Auto Play Trekkies Unite Commentary Retail Report: Get In Here! Generating Store Traffic Yankee Candle Shopper Marketing What Seniors Want Cyber Stumping Party Hearty Q & A: Paper Trail Ambush Marketing The Agency Center Resource Center Back-End Foundation Index of Advertisers Promo - January 2008 Promo - January 2008 - Promo - January 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - January 2008 - Promo - January 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Promo - January 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - January 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - January 2008 - Viral But Virtuous (Page 8) Promo - January 2008 - Power Chords (Page 9) Promo - January 2008 - Power Chords (Page 10) Promo - January 2008 - Tuning In (Page 11) Promo - January 2008 - Tuning In (Page 12) Promo - January 2008 - Auto Play (Page 13) Promo - January 2008 - Trekkies Unite (Page 14) Promo - January 2008 - Trekkies Unite (Page 15) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 16) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 17) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 18) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 19) Promo - January 2008 - Retail Report: Get In Here! (Page 20) Promo - January 2008 - Generating Store Traffic (Page 21) Promo - January 2008 - Generating Store Traffic (Page 22) Promo - January 2008 - Yankee Candle (Page 23) Promo - January 2008 - Shopper Marketing (Page 24) Promo - January 2008 - What Seniors Want (Page 25) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 26) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 27) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 28) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 29) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 30) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 31) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 32) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 33) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 34) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 35) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 36) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 37) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 38) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 39) Promo - January 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 40) Promo - January 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 41) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 42) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 44) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 45) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 46) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 47) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 48) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 49) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 50) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 51) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 52) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 53) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 54) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 55) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 56) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 57) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 58) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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