Guerrilla marketing can create attention quickly, but many companies in Nepal hesitate because the risks feel unpredictable. The fear is understandable: a bold idea can become memorable, but it can also become confusing, offensive, or difficult to measure if handled poorly.
Why companies hesitate
The most common concerns are cultural sensitivity, public reaction, permission, brand safety, unclear ROI, and loss of control once people start sharing the campaign online.
- Fear of negative public response.
- Concern about legal or location permissions.
- Uncertainty about return on investment.
- Difficulty controlling message interpretation.
- Risk of hurting brand trust.
When guerrilla marketing works
It works best when the idea is simple, relevant, respectful, and connected to the brand promise. Surprise alone is not strategy.
How to reduce risk
Plan scenarios before launch. Review cultural context, location permissions, public safety, brand tone, and response management. Connect the campaign to digital channels so engagement can be measured.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is guerrilla marketing suitable for every brand?
No. It suits brands that can handle attention and have a clear reason for using unconventional tactics.
Can guerrilla marketing be measured?
Yes. Track QR scans, website visits, social reach, mentions, inquiries, and campaign landing page conversions.
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