Apple ads blunt Microsoft's 'I'm a PC' campaign

Antimarketing ads by Apple getting wider 'viral' reach, says metrics firm

Apple's anti-Vista response last week to its rival's "I'm a PC" marketing campaign blunted the impact of Microsoft's efforts, an Internet video metrics firm said Wednesday.

Although the trio of television advertisements that Apple used to bash Microsoft's US$300 million Windows marketing program were viewed fewer times in their first week than the "I'm a PC" ads were in their first week, Apple's ads inspired twice as many video placements on the Web, said Matt Cutler, vice president of marketing and analytics at Visible Measures.

Cutler's company tracks some 160 video sharing sites, scanning each one daily to spot new videos and tally views for those posted earlier. One of its primary jobs for customers is to monitor the "viral" spread of advertising.

"It's not just about the brands today," Cutler said. "Fans copy ads, they might mash them up, they might do a spoof. We throw a lasso around all these videos to determine the whole reach of a campaign."

Last week, Apple hit back at Microsoft's new "I'm a PC" campaign -- which was a follow-up to controversial spots featuring comedian Jerry Seinfeld and former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates -- with three spots that poked fun at its rival's sprucing of Windows. Although ads in Apple's long-running "Get a Mac" campaign typically mock Vista for its perceived problems, the newest ads took aim at the large amount of money Microsoft has devoted to revamping Windows' reputation.

In the third Apple ad, dubbed "Bake Sale," the "PC" character holds a bake sale to raise money as he bemoans the funds given to advertising. "Since my problems don't seem to be a priority for them, I'm taking matters into my own hands ... a bake sale," says humorist John Hodgman, who plays the PC part.

According to Cutler, Apple's ads garnered only 70 percent of the views tallied by Microsoft's campaign. Apple's ads were viewed approximately 1.2 million times in the first week after they were posted to the Internet; Microsoft's "I'm a PC" ads, meanwhile, were viewed about 1.7 million times.

"There was lots of anticipation and discussion about Microsoft's ads," Cutler noted, especially after the unusual spots that featured Seinfeld and Gates. "It was new and different."

But Cutler considered Apple's ad views, even at just 70 percent of Microsoft's, as a win for the Cupertino, Calif. computer maker. "They were part of an ongoing series, so in that context 70 percent was a pretty darn good number," he said.

More about: Apple, Bill, Creative, Crucial, Microsoft, Newman
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