marketing

Microsoft’s IE8 "Get the Facts" campaign backfires

Microsoft has launched a new “Get the Facts” campaign, this time promoting Microsoft Internet Explorer. The marketing teams may have been a little *too* enthusiastic – the campaign has gone viral for all the wrong reasons.

Microsoft has launched a marketing campaign to promote the latest incarnation of its web browser, Internet Explorer 8 (IE8). The campaign is branded “Get the Facts”, a tagline which Microsoft previously used for a marketing campaign to try and demonstrate that Windows Server was a cheaper server platform than Linux.

This new campaign compares IE8 with competitor browsers Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome (although notably not with Apple’s Safari browser, which currently has many more users than Chrome does, or Opera, which has been around for a long time and is a major player in some markets).

The part which has attracted the most attention is this comparison page, which attempts to provide a point by point comparison against the other two browsers using check marks. Whilst the use of check marks for comparison is not necessarily bad – they provide a very accessible visual method of comparing features of multiple products – when you move beyond concrete features to more nebulous concepts such as usability, check marks may no longer be capable of presenting claims in an objective manner.

Dissecting the claims

Let’s look through some of the claims – or more precisely, how they are presented. Here are the first three rows in the table, covering the issues of security, privacy and "ease of use" respectively.

Microsoft's IE8 Get The Facts checkmarks
This chart suggests that the other browsers are insecure and hard to use.

The use of check marks here seems to imply that Internet Explorer 8 “has” all of these three things, whilst the other two browsers simply “do not”. The oversimplification of using check marks to “prove” the superiority of a product on such broad, multifaceted categories as these is almost inviting ridicule (regardless of the company producing it).

In a similar vein, further down the list is the issue of “reliability” – again, according to the check marks, IE8 has “got it” and its competitors don’t. Here Microsoft has reduced the complex concept of "reliability" to two features which it has – like the first three bullet points, this is a broad oversimplification.

U-turns

Let’s have a look now at some of the areas where the other browsers were given check marks by Microsoft.

For web standards, the initial version of this page declared “a tie” – stating:

It’s a tie. Internet Explorer 8 passes more of the World Wide Web Consortium’s CSS 2.1 test cases than any other browser, but Firefox 3 has more support for some evolving standards.

However, Microsoft failed to mention that it wrote many of these test cases. Unfortunately for Microsoft, on the Internet little details like this rarely get missed, and apparent conflicts of interest quickly turn into conspiracy theories and help fan the fires of bad press yet further. You might remember I said “initial version” – today, it now reads:

Firefox and Chrome have more support for emerging standards like HTML5 and CSS3, but Internet Explorer 8 invested heavily in having world-class, consistent support for the entire CSS2.1 specification.

Now that’s decidedly less positive than the earlier statement, isn’t it?

Another marketing U-turn happened in the "developer tools" category. Initially, Microsoft claimed a win here as IE8 comes with a number of such tools built-in, rather than having to download them separately. Again, the marketing piece disingenuously focuses on something which is technically correct whilst ignoring the wider picture. In addition to re-writing this comment as well, the change here was particularly glaring – Microsoft added another big green tick beside one of the other browsers.

There were further examples of somewhat dubious claims in the piece, but you get the general idea. From an Internet marketing perspective, what we’re really interested in is what happened after Microsoft published this marketing campaign on the web.

What happened next

So a high profile company runs a major marketing campaign filled with dubious claims – in a virally-friendly, accessible infographic format to boot. I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you what happened next.

Yes, unsurprisingly, people read it, laughed, and then sent it to their friends. And their friends sent it to their friends. And that, of course, is how things go viral. It went massively viral in an incredibly short space of time, hitting the homepage of Digg in no time at all. The Digg summary cheekily sums the entire article up with the comment “it’s amazing what you can conclude with checkmarks”. It didn’t stop there – two different satirical versions of the checklist and yet another critical article about it also made it to Digg’s homepage over the following two days. Imagine having four items on the Digg homepage which are critical of your new marketing campaign, in the space of a few days? Ouch!

The mainstream technical press weren’t kind either – the headline on ZDNet is "Microsoft’s IE8 "Get the facts" campaign – heavy on propaganda, light on facts", PCPro took the effort to give an in-depth point-by-point rebuttal of the claims, and PCWorld’s article, titled "IE8′s "Get the Facts Marketing Gets It Wrong", starts with the summary "If Microsoft wants us to take IE8 seriously, the company should treat our intelligence with some respect."

What does this mean? Honestly, I don’t think that the people who wrote this have a firm grasp on the brave new world of online PR. This piece was never going be taken at face value, and the events following its publication were completely foreseeable. It’s been a complete PR disaster for Microsoft. I mean really – what were they thinking?

Unless Microsoft’s PR team really are geniuses and already expected this to happen. All publicity is supposed to be good publicity, right?

Before I finish, I feel I must add an important note – Internet Explorer 8 is a massive leap in both web standards support and performance from its predecessor, Internet Explorer 7, and Microsoft should be commended for developing it. However, this marketing campaign was, quite simply, never going to be anything short of disastrous. The lesson is quite simple – in the age of the Int
ernet, dodgy statements and half-truths will be picked apart and, if the target is high-profile enough, will spread like wildfire. Just ask your MP.

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Search marketing rejoins the mainstream?

I had to give a presentation to a non-technical marketing team on the loose subject of ‘Search Algorithms’. There seems to be a reluctance amongst many traditional marketeers to embrace search, but old-school marketing is still one of the most powerful elements of search PR.

Search marketing is not the dark art that it is often perceived to be. The technical side of ethical SEO mostly involves avoiding mistakes, rather than clever tricks using smoke and mirrors and, as long as you have a good technical team who listen to your search consultant and do not fall foul of the many pitfalls of duplicate and obfuscated content, it is the marketing department who will make the difference between a good campaign and a great one.

To give you an idea of my audience, I used a PowerPoint presentation and included a ‘Top 10 on-page tips’ section. This was not difficult to write, but it forced me to think about ideas which I would normally take for granted. Search is changing, search engines are better at recognising and compensating for the mistakes and nuances of a CMS, recognising canonical pages and perceiving context. Attitudes to search are changing as well; on-line marketing is no longer lumped in with the classifieds in the budget as the ROI is too great to ignore.

There was a time when I would find myself giving advice to people who would nod and go away to the comfort of their existing systems, with a couple of new ideas which were soon to be swamped by the incoming tide of wistful thoughts regarding tea and biscuits, for the dunking of.

Thankfully that time has passed and the senior executives know about duplicate content, ask intelligent questions about reciprocal linking and social bookmarking and make sure that the changes suggested are implemented. The tea grows cold and the biscuits break off and float around disturbingly, whilst the poor techies are whipped into action.

The next step has to be recognising that search PR is still PR. Every major search engine bases the majority of its algorithmic bias on link analysis. Getting your message out and, perhaps more importantly, choosing the right message to put out, is absolutely necessary. The most spider-friendly site in the world is never going to rank if it has no value-adding content, if nobody has heard of it or if nobody wants to link to it.

The divide between the on-line and off-line world has become blurred for marketeers – I have had clients who refused to put their URL on print media as they did not want to detract from the impact of the print. This is, in the tone of Gerard Butler, madness. The majority of searches are performed by users who know what they are looking for. The top 10 industry-wide search terms for October 2007, as reported by Hitwise can demonstrate this far better than I:

  1. myspace
  2. ebay
  3. myspace.com
  4. craigslist
  5. youtube
  6. www.myspace.com
  7. mapquest
  8. yahoo
  9. facebook
  10. yahoo.com

Now, there are many reasons for this, including the laziness of users, but whatever the cause, the fact remains that these searches are performed by someone who already knows precisely what results they want returned. This is not about SEO, this is old-school marketing. Do a search for [badger] and the first result is for Jonti Picking’s superb Badger Badger Badger cartoon. Search for [kitten] and up comes Fraser Lewry’s kitten war. Neither of these sites has much in the way of content, but they have thousands of inbound links and huge volumes of traffic. These are not huge corporations, they are young men from publishing backgrounds who are making things that they love and marketing the results throughout the internet.

The moral? Make sure that your site follows best practice, research and target the right keywords and then go back to basics. Building links the ethical, organic, lasting way is about getting people to want to link to you and that is not done by computer wizardry, it is a matter of good, old fashioned PR.

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Netrank plays well with others.

Netrank works well with others and offers a return on investment that is qualified by both our clients and Revolution Magazine as being the best amongst search engine marketing agencies.

For the last 3 years, Revolution Magazine has asked its readers to rate the digital agencies they have worked with during the last 12 months.

Now, I know better than to set too much store by awards and surveys, but it is always nice to come first and to see some recognition for all the hard work. This year, I am delighted to be able to tell you that Netrank achieved joint first place for two out of three Search Engine Marketing categories – scoring 9 out of 10 for both ‘Return on Investment’ and ‘Works well with other agencies’.

These rankings were achieved thanks to votes from our clients and therefore are a very nice endorsement of our work. We could ask for no better a start to 2008; a massive vote of confidence in us as an agency.

At the end of the day, ROI is measurable and, of course, clients will see this as being of huge importance when they are selecting an agency, but I think that the ‘plays nicely’ result is more flattering, since it is less tangible and shows that the effort we put in to being the ‘nice guys of search’ is appreciated.

Champagne all round, I think.

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Christmas is coming, the site logs are getting fat.

Christmas is a time of wanton spending, and spending is increasingly moving on-line. Everyone wants a piece of the action but there are only so many places on the first page of search results.

Christmas spending is immense but the portion of that spend that is consumed online is growing fast. If you sell something on your website, the odds are there are other sites selling the same, or similar things. Competition grows by the year and with the online retail behemoths, like Amazon, seeming to sell nearly everything on the planet, it is getting hard to get your annual slice of the festive pie.

Add to this the apparently unending sea of affiliate sites that simply point you in the direction of people selling what you want, then the outlook for ranking for even the rarest of search phrases starts to look bleak. You have a perfectly optimised and architected site, but you are still nowhere for the competitive terms of your choice. What can you do to make your Christmas bonus a big one? Well, here are a few tips that might help.

1) Loss leaders. Sell your intended seasonal best-seller at cost for a month in the run-up to the seasonal peak and promote the offer like a madman. You need lots of stock and robust site, but people will link to you in droves. As you start to float to the top of the rankings, drop the offer and reap the rewards from riding the seasonal peak. This is very difficult to do and might not pay off, but it is worth considering.

2) Identify the weird long-tail searches that might not be so long at peak season. Granny wants to buy little Jimmy and iPod, but isn’t down wiv da yoof enough to know what they are called. What does she search for? Think outside the box (or rather think like a granny who is slightly hard of hearing). The search phrases "music pod" and "ipop", while dwarfed by the monstrous popularity of a phrase like "ipod", are surprisingly popular and have the same seasonal peaks. As well as being relatively easy to rank for in the organic listings, they have the added advantage of being easy targets for PPC.

3) Do something zany; everyone has heard of viral marketing but few get it spot-on. Blendtec made those fantastic videos that I hope everyone has seen: Will it Blend? The iPhone in a blender is an inspiration to all and should be mandatory viewing for all online marketing managers. Get viral marketing right and you will be bestowed with links in volumes that outstrip your wildest dreams; just make sure you host it on your own site and have a server that can cope with the load.

4) Know your seasonal trends. All the great plans in the world are worthless without timing. The Christmas build-up starts in September and really starts to fly at the start of November; nowhere is this clearer than the seasonal trend for the search phrase "Christmas Gifts".

5) Do research. The press in the run up to Christmas is full of little bits of research about how financially taxing or mentally stressful the season is. These bits of research aren’t overly expensive to undertake and there are a host of agencies willing to take your cash for doing the work. All you need to do then is write some conclusions around the results and push it to the press. Links to your site from online news outlets are very powerful things and the brand awareness that these generate shouldn’t be underestimated either.

Ultimately, implementing all the best architectural practices and the most razor-sharp optimised content in the world will only get you so far, and there are only so many places on the front page of results. The competition isn’t going to go away and while the spammy sites at the top are getting fewer and fewer, there are a host of good-quality sites waiting to replace them. You need to make noise about your brand; links will grow naturally, but people don’t link to you if they don’t know you exist.

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