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Apple Fires Back at Microsoft in Latest Round of Ad Wars
I've never been a big fan of American Idol or reality TV in general, but the tit for tat going on between Microsoft and Apple ads reminds me a bit of a reality TV competition with bloggers acting as Simon and Paula and the gang. We watch. Sometimes we laugh. Sometimes we sneer, but it's all in good fun right?
The latest ad in Apple's Get a Mac campaign goes straight after the new series of ads from Microsoft. Microsoft has tried a number of approaches, but its new series of Laptop Hunter ads, which goes after Apple's price seems to have hit home and Apple had to strike back. (I wrote about these ads in Microsoft Gives Apple the Full Court Press and Microsoft's Inferiority Complex on Display in New Ads.)
First Came The Bill and Jerry Show
The first series of ads you may recall (unless you've repressed it like a bad memory) featured the odd couple: Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld. I knew this was a bad idea from the get-go (as I wrote in Microsoft Seinfeld Strategy to Save Vista is Pathetic). The ads were strange, obtuse and missed the mark completely. If the aim was to change Microsoft's image, they failed miserably and were quickly scrapped.
Next Up: I'm a PC
I know some of the judges liked this one, but this campaign bugged me. I couldn't see the point. Of course a variety of people use PCs, but what does that even mean? Was it supposed to make people feel proud of their OS choice? Was it supposed to create a contrived rift between Mac and PC users? What was particularly stupid about this one is that it suggested you were either a Mac or a Windows user and as Dave Caolo pointed out in the post Microsoft's Inferiority Complex on Display in New Ads, you don't have to have a PC to run Windows:
And Finally: The Laptop Hunters
You've seen these ads. The judges really liked this series. Felt it hit the mark and went for Apple's soft underbelly, its high price. Although I thought these ads carried forth a clear message from Microsoft, I was disappointed to learn that at least the Lauren ad used a paid actress, but more importantly, these ads were flawed because Microsoft doesn't sell PCs, it sells an OS, which brings us to the latest Apple ad.
Apple Strikes Back
You knew it was a matter of time before the Mac creative team came up with an answer to the Laptop Hunters series, and the latest ad goes for Windows' weakest vulnerabilities, security and crashes. Microsoft and Apple continue to go at each other and unless Windows 7 is dead stable, Microsoft can come up with the best ads ever and they still won't find a way to win the ad war because Apple can always continue to smack them back down.
The latest ad in Apple's Get a Mac campaign goes straight after the new series of ads from Microsoft. Microsoft has tried a number of approaches, but its new series of Laptop Hunter ads, which goes after Apple's price seems to have hit home and Apple had to strike back. (I wrote about these ads in Microsoft Gives Apple the Full Court Press and Microsoft's Inferiority Complex on Display in New Ads.)
First Came The Bill and Jerry Show
The first series of ads you may recall (unless you've repressed it like a bad memory) featured the odd couple: Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld. I knew this was a bad idea from the get-go (as I wrote in Microsoft Seinfeld Strategy to Save Vista is Pathetic). The ads were strange, obtuse and missed the mark completely. If the aim was to change Microsoft's image, they failed miserably and were quickly scrapped.
Next Up: I'm a PC
I know some of the judges liked this one, but this campaign bugged me. I couldn't see the point. Of course a variety of people use PCs, but what does that even mean? Was it supposed to make people feel proud of their OS choice? Was it supposed to create a contrived rift between Mac and PC users? What was particularly stupid about this one is that it suggested you were either a Mac or a Windows user and as Dave Caolo pointed out in the post Microsoft's Inferiority Complex on Display in New Ads, you don't have to have a PC to run Windows:
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"What they don't seem to realize is that every Mac is a potential Windows box! VMWare Fusion and Parallels run Windows in a virtual environment, but Bootcamp, which is bundled with every Mac, runs Windows natively on that machine's hardware. Quite well, too. Why they don't just point this out is beyond me. "
You've seen these ads. The judges really liked this series. Felt it hit the mark and went for Apple's soft underbelly, its high price. Although I thought these ads carried forth a clear message from Microsoft, I was disappointed to learn that at least the Lauren ad used a paid actress, but more importantly, these ads were flawed because Microsoft doesn't sell PCs, it sells an OS, which brings us to the latest Apple ad.
Apple Strikes Back
You knew it was a matter of time before the Mac creative team came up with an answer to the Laptop Hunters series, and the latest ad goes for Windows' weakest vulnerabilities, security and crashes. Microsoft and Apple continue to go at each other and unless Windows 7 is dead stable, Microsoft can come up with the best ads ever and they still won't find a way to win the ad war because Apple can always continue to smack them back down.
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One issue I have with the ads is that I rarely encounter people who are THAT enthusiastic abut their PC purchase. I own both and I have a completely different attachment to my Mac. I weighed the negative and the positive and the negatives, for me, significantly outweighed the positives. When I purchased my MBP, I was so happy, I fairly skipped out of the store with it. My PC purchases, laptops and desktops, were made based on cost only. I needed a computer and didn't have the money to get what I really wanted. After owning PCs I soon went back to the Mac because I finally realized i NEEDED a computer that worked; that includes OS and the computer.
I LOVE MY MAC.....
I LOVE MY MAC.....
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Thanks for leaving a comment. I'm with you. Been using PCs for 25 years, going back to the DOS days and I've never enjoyed a computer as much as I do my MBP, which I bought 2.5 years ago.
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I guess it's part of this industry to have some sort of competition.Competition to provide the public the most advanced technological devices that will surely help the people's lives.
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