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Try Your Hand At A Home Server Haiku (ie. A contest ;-)

Feeling literary? Creative? Or maybe just passionate for the latest generation of Windows Home Server devices hitting the market? Either way, here’s your chance to win a Home Server and host of other great prizes including Zune HD players and 1 TB hard drives to help expand your storage.

Through December 11th, Intel and Microsoft are co-sponsoring A Home Server Haiku contest. To enter, simply write a haiku about how a home server would help bring peace of mind to your life—or simply why you really want one. Your name will be entered in a contest to win one of three new home servers, one of ten Zune digital audio players, or one of ten 1TB hard drives.

If you’re like me, a handy English class refresher on Haikus can be found here, courtesy of Wikipedia (simply put, it’s a poem made up of three lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables, with thankfully no rhyming needed).  :-)

More details – and the entry form - are up on the website www.winahomeserver.com.

So here’s my attempt:

Each day it helps me

From its perch in my basement

My little server

I’m sure you can do better…Give it a try, and spread the word!

- Mark

Written by Mark Pendergrast on November 23rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Marketing and Team and otherSoftware and Partner and Community and home server and Windows Home Server.

Win Tickets to Family Guy Presents: Seth & Alex’s Almost Live Comedy Show!

Yesterday, we announced a marketing collaboration with FOX that will showcase Windows 7 launching October 22nd.

Windows 7 will be the exclusive sponsor of an upcoming TV show from Seth MacFarlane called Family Guy Presents: Seth & Alex’s Almost Live Comedy Show (working title) which will air Sunday November 8th at 8:30 p.m. (EST and PST). Seth is the creator of “Family Guy,” “American Dad” and “The Cleveland Show.” It with star both Seth and his “Family Guy” co-star Alex Borestein (she does the voice of “Lois” among many other characters in case you were wondering). The show will air “commercial-free” instead featuring unique Windows 7-branded programming that blends seamlessly into the show. Seth and Alex teamed up with us here at Microsoft, Universal McCann and Crispin, Porter + Bogusky to come up with Windows 7 branded integrations within the show.

To celebrate this awesome collaboration with FOX, the Windows Outreach Team will be doing a giveaway as part of their ongoing #WinWin7 Contest on Twitter for exclusive tickets to see the taping of Family Guy Presents: Seth & Alex’s Almost Live Comedy Show in Los Angeles this Friday starting at 3:30pm.

Watch the tweets from @MSWindows this afternoon to find out how to win. For #winwin7 contest rules, click here.

As a huge Family Guy fan, I’m stoked to see this collaboration air on TV on November 8th. And to those who win tickets to watch the taping, I will be jealous.

Side tidbit – to fellow Star Trek fans out there: Did you know Seth McFarlane did a small stint on Star Trek: Enterprise?

On top of sponsoring Family Guy Presents: Seth & Alex’s Almost Live Comedy Show, we are also working together with FOX to reach out to more than 4.3 million college students on campuses across the United States. The 12 week tour will give students a chance to try Windows 7 as well as enjoy customized entertainment created by FOX Licensing and Merchandising such as customized “Family Guy” content. That’s rad ;-)

Written by Brandon LeBlanc on October 14th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on #WinWin7 and Windows Outreach Team and Seth McFarlane and Family Guy and Alex Borestein and FOX and Social Media and Social Networking and windows 7 and Giveaway and otherSoftware and Twitter and Marketing and Contest.

What’s up with those ads?

As I did previously, I'm posting this on behalf of my colleague David Webster.

Since my last post here as a guest blogger a few weeks back was to give you some context on the Mojave Experiment, I figured I should do the same for the other little campaign we're running on TV right now. Even if you're not a TV watcher, you probably know the one I'm talking about. It involves Churros, Pleather, Big Top Points and the Conquistador. Oh yeah, there's a Windows logo in there at the end too.

I thought I got a lot of mail when the Mojave spots came out, but I was wrong. Even in an election year (or maybe because we're in an election year), people sure do seem to enjoy debating our marketing.

Between the enthusiastic notes from enthusiasts,  the predictable notes from friends and family, and the even more predictable notes from haters and fanboys, two common questions emerged:

  1. Do you really think these ads will make people want to buy Windows Vista?
  2. Are you getting the reaction you expected/wanted?

Fortunately these are both really easy to answer.  Since I've seen tons of speculation out there (some very literate and interesting, others not so much), I figured it would be a good idea to answer them both here.

You might have seen that in some interviews last week we called these initial TV spots "icebreakers" designed to start a new kind of conversation. That's exactly what they are. Icebreakers. Not the whole campaign. Not even the main part of the campaign. Just the beginning of the campaign. Just as somebody might tell a joke to lighten up a room or get somebody's attention before changing gears, these first ads were designed to tap people on the shoulder and say "Excuse me. We're back and we'd love a few moments of your time".

Will seeing Bill and Jerry enjoy each other's company make people run out and buy a new laptop? Or correct misperceptions some non-users might have about Windows Vista?

Certainly not. We'd be crazy to think they would. That's why we're continuing the Mojave Experiment ads. That's their job.

And they do their job simply by giving people who've never done so an excuse to check out Windows Vista for themselves.

But this campaign, when fully unveiled, will talk about Windows in all its forms. Not just the OS for PCs we happen to be shipping today. In fact, not just an OS. And not just on PCs. Simply put, this campaign isn't about Windows Vista. It's about Windows.

That might not be what some folks were/are expecting. And it might be hard to believe given what you've seen so far.

But remember, we have gone on record saying the broader campaign will "tell the Windows story" and we intend to judge its success on that basis.

In that light I think it's pretty safe to conclude we don't expect the little logo at the end of these spots to do all that work by itself.

Answering question #2 is even easier.

Yes.

When you set out to create advertising, the thing that keeps you up at night is not "Will some people not get it or like it?"

Rather its "Will anyone pay any attention and notice"? I think we can safely check that box. Oscar Wilde's quote on the subject may be overused, but it's good to keep in mind when thinking about marketing products that can get taken for granted in today's crowded media landscape: "The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about."

I'm not going to give any more details about how the campaign will evolve over the next couple of weeks, you'll have to stay tuned and see for yourself.

Or you can just listen to what folks are talking about on podcasts, blogs and around water coolers the next day ;-)

In that spirit, here are some of the best Seinfeld-inspired headlines we collected from various news outlets over the last few weeks. We sure made the headline writers' jobs more interesting (even when they got the Windows Vista focus wrong):

  • What's Up With the Ad About Nothing That Has Everyone Talking?
  • Seinfeld Peddles Vista From Milan to Minsk
  • These Churros are making me thirsty
  • You Vista Vista'd Over The Best Part!
  • Seinfeld goes to bat for Microsoft, yada yada yada
  • Is That The Conquistador? They Run Tight.
  • Microsoft talks Seinfeld into wearing the puffy OS
  • Microsoft: Still Master of the Operating System Domain
  • Vista & Seinfeld: Not That There's Anything Wrong with That

Written by Chris Flores on September 11th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Jerry Seinfeld and Marketing and TV ads and Brand and Windows Brand and Windows Consumer Campaign and Windows and bill gates and otherSoftware and Featured News.

Is Windows Marketing Nothing or Something?

Microsoft has formally announced its new Windows marketing campaign. I'm baffled. Are you?


The first TV commercial, featuring comedian Jerry Seinfeld and Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, aired last night. Jerry helps Bill buy shoes. Microsoft's press release explains what I had already figured out: "Some may wonder what Jerry Seinfeld helping Bill Gates pick out a new pair of shoes has to do with software. The answer, in the classic Seinfeld sense of the word, is nothing."

Huh? Isn't advertising supposed to be about something? When I was a kid, singer Billy Preston had a big hit with song "Nothing from Nothing." The song wasn't my taste, but it was a No. 1 hit. From the lyric:

"Nothin' from nothin' leaves nothin' You gotta have somethin' If you wanna be with me"

A commercial about nothing is nothing. Right? Commercials are supposed to be memorable. Advertising's goal is make an impression and associate that impression with a brand. Maybe I expect too much from Microsoft and ad agency Crispin, Porter + Bogusky. Maybe I don't have enough sense of humor. Or maybe nothing from nothing really is nothing.

Here's the problem: Windows Vista is a troubled product that has had little marketing support for about 18 months. Microsoft is spending at least $300 million on a new marketing campaign. I expected Microsoft to capture the imagination and endear people to Windows. The first commercial leaves the viewer remembering Bill Gates, Jerry Seinfeld and the "Conquistador" shoe.

Two different people I spoke to about the commercial bristled about racism, because of the churros, Hispanic onlookers in the store window and the "Conquistador" name of the shoes. I wouldn't go that far, but I will observe that more air time was given to the shoe store window than to Windows. My wife exclaimed, "Oh, lighten up!" She didn't see any racism in the 90-second spot.

She said: "To me it's funny—the Hispanic family in the window—because they don't say, 'Oh, it's Bill Gates.' It's the Conquistador." Oh, you mean Bill Gates isn't the Conquistador, honey?

She laughed at the commercial, by the way. Frequently. Is this like a woman thing, or am I just too much the sourpuss to laugh? The commercial did make an impression on my wife, who described it as "funny" but "strange;" she didn't see the connection to Windows.

source: microsoft-watch.com

Written by Madhukar on September 8th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Marketing and otherSoftware.