Archive for September, 2009

Microsoft Windows 7 House Party: Public Relations Disaster or Video Marketing Triumph?

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

If you create something so bad that it goes viral, is it a public relations disaster or a video marketing triumph?

That’s the question that journalists and bloggers are asking after watching HostingYourParty, which tells you how to host a Microsoft Windows 7 House Party.

Microsoft is putting a Tupperware-style twist on the upcoming Windows 7 rollout — launching a new initiative to encourage thousands of employees, partners and technology enthusiasts to throw parties in their homes and communities to demonstrate and help spread the word about its new operating system.

People accepted as official launch party hosts will get their own copy of Windows 7 Ultimate Edition, and a chance to win a computer. But unlike the Tupperware model, there will be no literal selling. These parties are more about generating word-of-mouth buzz.

Windows 7 House Party.png To promote this idea, Microsoft has uploaded a video to YouTube. Some journalists and bloggers think it is a public relations disaster.

Cindy Perman of CNBC writes, “You just knew that once they put the Microsoft geeks in charge of the “party,” that it wouldn’t be a 10-kegger and before long, we’d all be putting lampshades over our heads.”

Ian Douglas, a tech blogger for the Daily Telegraph in London, writes, “I’m beginning to think that no one involved with Microsoft’s advertising has ever left the house or spoken to a real person.”

And James Lileks of The Bleat writes, “If Microsoft had been put in charge of marketing sex, the human race would have ended long ago, because no one would be caught dead doing something that uncool.”

Now, you may be tempted to watch this 6-minute, 14-second video yourself — to jump to your own conclusion. But, I warn you — only serious geeks like me will watch beyond the first minute.


HostingYourParty

Now, if Microsoft really wanted to show people how to hold a Windows 7 Launch Party, they might have created a remix of the 1950s educational video below about what, in fact, makes a “good” party.


1950 - What Makes a Good Party

Not all of the reaction to Microsoft’s Windows 7 House Party has been negative. Some of it can be charitably described as “mixed.”

David Meerman Scott of Web Ink Now, asks, “Is this Microsoft Windows 7 House Party thing real? Or is it an incredibly wonderful and clever spoof on a 50s educational video that is so well done as to have fooled most observers who seem to think it is legit?”

Janice L. Brown of The Fussy Marketer also asks, “Hmm, if something goes viral because it’s so bad, does that still count as achieving the marketing goals?”

Nevertheless, Lieutenant Columbo, if he were blogging these days, would ask just one more thing: “Why did Microsoft disable ratings and adding comments on HostingYourParty?”

Is this something you’d do if you were hoping for a video marketing triumph?

Inquiring minds want to know.

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Click Forensics Adds Real-Time Capabilities to Audience Quality Measurement Platform

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Click Forensics is enhancing their audience quality measurement platform with real-time capabilities. Now, online publishers and ad networks can identify good and bad advertising traffic in real-time.

“In its simplest form, our real-time audience quality tracking capabilities make it possible for publishers and ad networks to immediately block bad site visitors from seeing ads, and show the right ads to the real buyers,” said Paul Pellman, CEO of Click Forensics. “This instantaneous audience quality determination is an important step in transforming the results that search, display and social ad providers deliver to their clients.”

The new capabilities were built with a RESTful web service API that integrates into existing high-volume ad network infrastructures. As a result, it takes less than 10 milliseconds for Click Forensics’ platform can score requests and process requests. This means traffic quality can be determined before an advertiser is charged for a click.

All of this is also the basis for a new real-time scoring engine in development at Click Forensics. The scoring engine will help advertisers and publishers making decisions about ad-serving based on traffic quality.

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New Consumer Protection PSAs Appear in Bing Search Ads

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Microsoft has teamed up with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) and Western Union to serve consumer protection PSAs in Bing’s search ads. The new ads address scams involving mortgages, foreclosure, credit repair and money transfers.

Some of the keywords included in the PSA effort are:

  • foreclosure rescue
  • mortgage foreclosure
  • fix my credit
  • credit repair
  • money transfer

When a searcher clicks on one of the PSA search ads, they will see a landing page with warnings about scams related to the keyword. The FTC hosts the landing pages for credit repair and mortgage foreclosure while a landing page for avoiding advanced fee fraud is hosted by Microsoft.

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Yahoo! Launches Ads on Mobile Search for iPhone and Android

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

With mobile search on the rise, it’s no surprise that search engines wish to monetize the traffic. Yahoo! today announced that they’re adding search advertising to their mobile search for iPhones, iPod Touches and Android devices.

One ad appears at the top of the search results and two ads appear at the bottom. Take a look:

yahoomobilepaidsearch092909-1.jpg

yahoomobilepaidsearch092909-2.jpg

Noticeably missing from the announcement is the inclusion of Windows Mobile phones, a curious exclusion in the wake of the recently struck Microsoft-Yahoo! search deal.

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