Microsoft Ads Embrace Apple’s I’m-a-PC Tag

Microsoft Ads Embrace Apple

Microsoft is launching the second phase of its campaign to recapture the Windows brand...by embracing Apple's "I'm a PC" label.

After rolling out a pair of commercials featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld in somewhat offbeat—and somewhat poorly received—sketches, Microsoft is kicking off the second stage of its $300 million attempt to recapture the public conversation about the Windows brand. And the ads will do it by embracing the "I’m a PC" label created by Apple in its long-running Mac vs. PC advertising campaign, in which PCs have been (ably) personified by comedian John Hodgman.

Starting with a Microsoft engineer—"Sean"—dressed to resemble Houseman saying "Hello, I’m a PC, and I’ve been made into a stereotype," Microsoft hopes to subvert Apple’s successful campaign extolling the Macintosh’s ease of use by showing Windows users who are proud to be using Windows PCs and released Windows mobile and Internet services. Bill Gates makes a cameo appearance in the campaign, but Jerry Seinfeld is noticeably absent. Instead, celebrities Eva Longoria, Pharrell Williams, and Deepak Chopra make appearances. More than 60 Microsoft employees will also appear, accompanied by email addresses. (If you’re curious, Gates’ is given as bill@windows.com. Sure, try it.)

Building around the tagline "Windows—Life Without Walls," the campaign hopes to demonstrate to consumers that the Windows ecosystem of software and services—from desktops to mobile devices to the Web—enables users to communicate, work, play, and share with friends, family, and colleagues. Windows enables productivity, collaboration, and communications, rather than putting up barriers.

"On our journey to make sure that Windows enables a life without walls, we’ve taken a step back, reevaluated and tuned and tweaked our approach," Bill Veghte, Senior Vice President, Online Services & Windows Business Group, in a statement. "So you’re seeing that in the advertising, in the products, in the experience at retail and on Windows.com."

The idea of embracing, and subverting, a competitor’s successful advertising campaign is not new. However, the strategy does run some risks, particularly if the competitor can easily flip the tables back again. And with a advertising-savvy competitor like Apple, you know some folks in Redmond—and at the agency Crispin Porter & Bogusky which came up with the ads—have spent a lot of time wondering how, and if, Apple might respond.

Showing 6 comments

  1. ian@digitaltrends.com at 10:29am 19th September 2008 Here is the commercial on YouTube.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkZdkHylJ3w

    Not bad, definately better than the Senfield commercials.
  2. Jon M at 9:36am 19th September 2008 I always found it funny that Apple only seemed to compare Macs with PCs. Everything about the Macs HAD to be in relation to PCs, which really doesn't tell me anything about the Mac.
    Now that Microsponge is doing the same thing, it's more about the idea-bankrupt ad companies than anything else.
  3. Tim Stevens at 7:31am 19th September 2008 While I've never been a fan of Microsoft's commercials, this makes them look pretty desperate. It's obvious who they are targeting by these new ads, and in doing so they are acknowledging that they consider Apple a serious threat now.
  4. Kontra at 2:12am 19th September 2008 The ad agency behind "Windows. Life Without Walls" is Crispin Porter + Bogusky. Their principal tactic in a number of recent ad campaigns has been the notion of perception reversing.
    [...]
    Therein lies Microsoft's problem. Perception reversing by appropriating your enemy's words can work only if your insurgency has an identifiable goal. Witness Apple which effectively used its insurgent status to barge into the consumer desktop, digital music and cellphone businesses and changed them in alignment with users' shared aspirations.

    Microsoft, one of the most lucrative monopolies ever, however, is no insurgent. Its enemy is smaller, cooler, better liked, more nimble, more creative and more aligned with users. So Microsoft has to not only show "it's OK to use Windows" but tell us why it's better and show us a goal that we can all identify with that the enemy cannot provide.

    Microsoft "I'm a PC" ads are channeling Apple's "Crazy Ones"
    http://counternotions.com/2008/09/19/crazy-ones/
  5. John B at 10:57am 18th September 2008 They just don't get it. John Hodgman, the "I'm a PC" guy, represents the computer, not its user. He's Windows -- old, stodgy, and insecure. NOT the typical Windows user.

    It seems to me that if you try to turn around or subvert someone else's ad, you should at least understand it. You'd think they'd learn from history, copying only the superficial aspects of the OS without really understanding what makes that OS what it is.
  6. TechFreak at 9:14am 18th September 2008 I was wondering how long it would take Microsoft to fight back against Apple. Their Jerry Senfield campaign is extrememly stupid and Apple has been eating away their marketshare.
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