Last Updated: November 28, 2020
Source: Marketing School
Unsplash, Priscilla Du Preez
Pharmaceutical marketers, hospitals and several other industries use stealth marketing in their profit efforts.
In 2002, Sony Ericsson was one of the first companies to produce a cellular phone with a digital camera peripheral, called the T68i. The company wanted to generate buzz on a large scale for the T68i, but the device was such a novel combination of technologies that its marketing department struggled to find a way to both educate and excite consumers with traditional advertising like magazine ads and TV commercials. For a more organic, person-to-person marketing experience, Sony Ericsson started what would become one of the most famous examples of stealth marketing in history.
Using 60 actors in 10 major cities, Sony Ericsson instigated a viral effect that is still talked about today. The actors, posing as tourists, couples, and other regular people, asked strangers on the street to help them take a picture (See also Undercover Marketing).
Instead of handing those strangers a camera, they handed them their new camera-phone by Sony Ericsson. They talked enthusiastically about the device’s features and taught the helpful passers-by how to use it. The aim of the campaign was to get as many people as possible to talk about their unique experience with a new and innovative camera-phone. The campaign was largely considered a success, with the T68i rising to become one of the best selling phones of the year in several countries.
What is stealth marketing?
Stealth marketing, also known as buzz marketing, is any marketing strategy that advertises a product to people without them knowing they are being marketed to (See also Buzz Marketing). There are many techniques in stealth marketing, the most common being product placement and undercover marketing. The main purpose of stealth marketing is not to generate immediate sales, but to create interest and excitement that will make consumers more receptive to direct advertising later.
Word of Mouth is Powerful
Stealth marketing can be a great way to spread product info by word-of-mouth. The numbers related to word-of-mouth are an advertiser’s dream come true.
2.4 billion: Number of brand-related conversations every day in the U.S.
90% happen offline
66% are positive
Source: Word of Mouth Marketing Association
Sony Ericsson’s T68i camera-phone marketing campaign employed actors who secretly represented the company, giving them opportunities to interact with strangers and promote the poduct in a non-obvious way. Many companies choose this method because it is inexpensive compared to more traditional advertising.
Product placement features a product outside of the context of an advertisement, usually as a part of some form of mass media or entertainment. Companies place their products in movies and TV shows, and enter endorsement deals with celebrities to pitch products.
Regardless of what specific approach a company takes, stealth marketing is most effective in raising awareness about a new product that hasn’t been widely advertised yet.
Who uses stealth marketing?
A variety of companies can use stealth marketing techniques to drum up buzz for a product. It is most commonly used by larger companies that can afford to use multiple marketing strategies for a single product; although, stealth marketing has also been used successfully by small companies to create interest in a new product.
Sony Ericsson used stealth marketing for the T68i because it was a product that most consumers did not know about. They hoped that their undercover marketing campaign would get people talking about a novel technology before the company launched other forms of advertising for the phone.
Beware of Backlash Some stealth marketing campaigns have been highly effective, but others have been disasters. In late 2005 and early 2006, Sony tried to make undercover lightning strike twice with a series of online videos and a fan site promoting the PSP handheld console that they were marketing in the guise of an enthusiastic fan. People discovered the truth very quickly and the campaign had the opposite of Sony’s intended effect. It generated highly negative buzz about Sony and its marketing consultants at an agency called Zipatoni. Though it’s difficult to say if this impacted sales of the PSP, it did great harm to Sony’s public image.
Smaller companies without extensive marketing resources can use stealth marketing to raise awareness about a product instead of using any traditional advertising at all.
Have you seen stealth marketing before? Which industry? How does stealth marketing impact your health?
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