In a period of growing global tensions, typical marketing methods fail when faced with actual Black Swan events—sudden, catastrophic shocks that transcend conventional forecasts. This groundbreaking study demonstrates how businesses may turn existential dangers into competitive accelerants by thoroughly stress-testing preparation. Analyzing 127 international firms during the 2022 Ukraine crisis, we establish a quantifiable Preparedness Premium. Firms that systematically war-gamed three or more geopolitical scenarios preserved 19% more shareholder value than reactive peers by mastering volatility as a strategy. The verified GEOSHIELD framework serves as the blueprint for replacing fragile equilibrium-based models with an antifragile architecture that thrives on disturbance. Organizations gain significant benefits in the critical 72-hour "golden period" following a shock by using advanced scenario planning and real-time threat intelligence. We show how dynamic price elasticity models transform supply chain chaos into perceived value enhancement, and semantic shielding strategies protect brand sentiment from narrative weaponization. Cross-industry case studies—from Nestlé's 280 million advertising shift to Coca-Cola's algorithmic trust recovery—show that marketing resilience necessitates integrating continual adaptation into business DNA. The study also reveals important frontiers: the SME scalability barrier, the ethical bounds of predictive simulations, and the worrying "resilience fatigue" that degrades reactions to recurrent crises. For CEOs facing constant turbulence, this research provides more than just survival strategies; it outlines a paradigm shift in which volatility becomes the ultimate source of market advantage. Master the Premium, or succumb to anarchy.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Simon Suwanzy Dzreke
Federal Aviation Administration
Semefa Elikplim Dzreke
Federal Aviation Administration
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Dzreke et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68af55dead7bf08b1eadcb98 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.71350/3062192588