Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld Part 2: Regular People

September 12, 2008

The next installment of Microsoft’s controversial ad campaign featuring Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Gates is out. And you know what? It’s pretty good.

It’s crazy that an ad campaign starring one of the least-edgy comedians out there and the world’s foremost philanthropist could ever be controversial. But the first Seinfeld/Gates ad was just that: Microsoft had for months touted an upcoming ad campaign that would strike back at Apple’s Mac vs. PC spots and would help set the record straight about Windows Vista; it delivered 90 surreal seconds of Seinfeld and Gates shopping for discount shoes.

The second installment isn’t much different in tone from the first one, and it’s three times as long. In it, Seinfeld and Gates move in with a stereotypical suburban family so they can experience life in the real world. It’s too long, but it does feature some clever lines, Seinfeld clipping his toe nails, and Gates reading the world’s worst bedtime story – proving again that he has a rare talent for deadpan self-mockery.

Again there’s no mention of Windows. But we’re OK with that. And in a weird way the first ad makes a little more sense now, although we still feel that it pushed absurdity a little too far.
Here’s a rather sane interpretation of the ads and the initial response – overwhelmingly negative – that Microsoft’s Chris Flores posted on the Windows Vista blog:

    “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…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 it’s ‘Will anyone pay any attention and notice?’ I think we can safely check that box.”

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I Don’t Get The New Microsoft TV Ad But I Like It

September 5, 2008

People are already talking about the new Microsoft TV ad featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld. paidContent.org called the ad “pretty pathetic“, Sam Diaz “didn’t get it“. TechCrunch got word from Microsoft that the ad is triggered to “engage consumers” and “spark conversation,” which I guess it is doing.

In any event, I saw the ad on TV last night. I tried to concentrate on it, but right after, I asked, “what did that mean?” I enjoyed the commercial because it was Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld in a weird situation, doing “nothing,” as Jerry is known for. But what are they really going for here?

Here is the ad, what do you think:

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Entrance to an Exhibit

June 19, 2008

Interesting… Not sure what to think of this

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10 Toys from the 80s that Made you Gay

June 4, 2008

I’m trying to figure out what marketing department actually approved #1. I mean, honestly, think about the board room discussion that went into that one.

Editors Note: This is Lube the Mind’s 100th post!  That’s a lot of MM.

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23-Cent Pizza: Good Idea or Bad Promotion?

May 12, 2008

Editors note: Every now and then at Lube, we like to get have a post that doesn’t deal with poop or something of like nature, so….

Line for Papa JohnsThursday, in North Eastern Ohio, 86 Papa John’s Pizza stores decided to sell 23-cent pizzas as a truce after they agreed to offer a franchise in Washington D.C. t-shirts calling LeBron James a “CRYBABY.” This was in response to the Cleveland Cavaliers star complaining about hard fouls during a NBA playoff series that was with the Washington Wizards (Which Cleveland won, of course).

The idea of the 23-cent pizza was a way to make up with the Cleveland area fans and honor James by selling pizza for the same price as LaBron’s jersey number, 23. Papa John’s planned on selling more the 75,000 pizzas.

The promotion had crowds standing for hours in extremely long lines waiting, hours reportedly, for the 23-cent pepperoni pizza. While everything went off without a lot of pandemonium, there were scores of complaints about the wait and line cutting.

The good that came out of this promotion is that all the money went to the LeBron James Family Foundation.

What are your thoughts?

Do you think this was a good idea?
Do you think Papa John’s saved face or were people just taking advantage of a deal?
In your opinion, will this charade have any long effect for Papa John’s?
Was this just another marketing gimmick based on controversy?

In my humble opinion, and in true Lube fashion, Papa John’s can suck my balls.
Stay Classy.

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The Power of Branding

February 25, 2008

It’s interesting how easily recognizable some products are when you strip away everything but the packaging and coloring.

For instance, this one doesn’t need any prompting:

mmpeanut2.jpg

Check them out, Candy & Chips.

Another blog with some trendy package designs.

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Could you pull a Radiohead?

October 11, 2007

OK, I figured it was about time for the first (somewhat) serious topic here…

RadioheadRadiohead, shocked the music world by first dumping their record label and then announcing that they planned to make their latest album, “In Rainbows”, available digitally with a “pay what you think it’s worth” pricing model.

Could you make a product or service so satisfying that people would pay enough, voluntarily, to make it a profitable venture? Perhaps, but maybe that’s not the entire point. What Radiohead has done has created so much buzz that the influx of new listeners to the band may make any potential loss pale in comparison. They have also, according to many in the industry, defined the direction the entire music industry is headed. This strategy is big, fast, hot, fresh to your door in 30 minutes or it’s free, big.

Could you create a marketing strategy that would define your industry? Could you do something so big that your peers (not your prospects) would call you crazy? That’s the brilliance behind the Radiohead model.

It’s in the pricing, the package, the guarantee, the delivery, the repackaging, the service, the people, the marketing, it’s hidden, but it’s there. You catch a glimpse of it if you stop trying so hard to be like everyone else in your industry and look for a meaningful way to stand out.