Guerilla marketing lessons from AMC and The Walking Dead

How AMC Made Me Care About The Walking Dead

Posted by Amy Peveto on March 04, 2014

I have zero interest in following the plot of AMC’s The Walking Dead, but got more than a little obsessed with following their season four marketing. It’s Guerrilla marketing at its grossest and finest, and I can’t stop talking about it — which is, of course, the point.

Gabie wrote a great article on Guerrilla marketing ins 2013 in which she perfectly stated its purpose:

“Guerilla Marketing should surprise consumers, create a memorable impression and create a large amount of social buzz.”

Checking the scoreboard:

  • The season four premier was viewed by over 16 million people, 10.4 million of whom were adults in the coveted 18-49 demographic.
  • Millions of tweets and photos promoting season premiers.
  • A fan-run podcast (The Talking Dead) has thousands of subscribers and followers.
  • Over 42 million people list the show as one of their Facebook “Likes”.

Not only is Guerrilla marketing helping The Walking Dead succeed, it’s also contributing to the “coolification” of AMC — they’re trying to appeal to a wider, younger audience, and what’s cooler right now than zombies and over-the-top marketing tactics?

So awesome it’s scary

AMC has developed a reputation for utilizing Guerrilla marketing to promote their most popular show, and they make use of an impressive range of media types.

First up, the mobile (and eye-catching) ad:

Followed by the “creepy countdown” display in Toronto’s Union Station (bonus points for creating a Twitter contest in which people tweeted a photo of themselves with the hashtag #TWDFeb10 for a chance to win one of the severed fingers).

Then they hijacked a movie theater and filmed the results.

And lastly, they scared the pants off unsuspecting New Yorkers.

These stunts are surprising, memorable, and — thanks to complementary online contests — contribute to a huge social media buzz.

How this helps you

It doesn’t specifically (unless you own AMC stock), but like any other great marketing scheme it provides great takeaways.

It takes a lot to catch and hold people’s attention; don’t be afraid to get creative and try something new.

Caveat: it won’t work if you suck

AMC’s Guerrilla marketing is successful because The Walking Dead lives up to the hype.

If the show was terrible, its viewers would turn that #TWDFeb10 into a vehicle for mockery, its ratings plummet, and it would be cancelled.

Guerrilla marketing is your brand, your promise that your product or service is as awesome as your marketing. If you lure consumers in with a great message and then disappoint them, you will never gain a loyal customer base.

More great marketing ideas

[Image: AMC

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Submitted by Is your produ… on Fri, 05/23/2014 - 2:44am

[...] Il successo mediatico della campagna comincia nel 2011, quando in un cinema di Johannesburg, i presenti sono seduti a guardare uno dei trailer che precedono la visione del film. Tutti sono più o meno impegnati a seguire le vicissitudini amorose presentate nel corto, quando improvvisamente in sala entra uno zombie pronto a scatenare il panico. Vi state chiedendo come va a finire? Non vi rovinerò la sorpresa, ecco il video [...]