 |
|
|
In the never-ending advertising
war between Microsoft and Apple, seemingly designed only to see who has the
biggest… wit, it’s Apple’s turn to parry and thrust, as they make a delicious
display of self-irony by accusing Microsoft of the very things they’re doing in
the selfsame ads. How so? Let’s take a look…
The first
of the new Mac ads, titled “Bean Counter”, presents our hip young ‘Mac’
character expressing his baffled state at PC, who is “doing a little
budgeting”, and putting a large amount of money into advertising and very
little into “fix vista”, the subtle, easy-to-miss gist here being that
Microsoft are trying to cover up Vista’s shortcomings via an expensive
advertising program, instead of using the money on actually fixing Vista. Yet
lo and behold, Apple is delivering this scathing, righteous satire through an
expensive ad campaign of its own, funny that.
The second
ad, called “V word,” is accusing Microsoft of dodging the Vista reliability
issue again, by just removing the word “Vista”
from Windows, instead of addressing the reasons why the name has become a badge
of shame. Now I’m not the one to shirk a healthy dose of hypocrisy in
advertising, it’s the American way after all, but one can’t help but let out a
giggle considering Vista’s bad name in the eyes of the public is in no small
part due to Apple’s ads directly attacking the brand. Microsoft practically has
no choice but to dump the brand name and move on to “Windows 7.” Vista’s flaws are quite real, but Microsoft’s Mojave Experiment
proved just how much of a stigma the name alone can be.
Finally, the underlying tone of Apple’s recent ads is that
Microsoft is paying little attention to their actual products in their latest
adverts. They’re right, but there’s scarcely a mention of Macs anywhere in
these new ads, especially considering the major MacBook line refresh they
launched last week.
I’m not saying Microsoft is any better though, they tried to
be funny by using Seinfeld and Bill Gates to glorify the nerds that Apple are
making out PC users to be, but they’ve miserably failed, instead delivering one
of the most bizarre advertising experiences of the 21st century.
In the end, the little go-between Apple and Microsoft have
had going for a while may be (mildly) amusing in the short run, but in the long
run it’s leading nowhere fast. Neither of them are informing the public about
their own products qualities, and aren’t very far away from a disgraceful
catfight. This sort of ‘competitive’ advertising has a long tradition in the United States,
but hey, at least Coca
Cola and Pepsi did it with more style!
© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia