Blog: Microsoft's Life May Depend on Defining a PC Lifestyle
- 27 February, 2009 11:46
- Comments
The reaction to Microsoft's plan to open retail stores from bloggers and pundits has been mostly negative. It's likely to fail, they say. Why? Because Microsoft doesn't offer an "experience" or a "lifestyle" or that special, personality-defining, everything's gonna be OK allure that Apple stores offer.
Yet the "PC lifestyle" does exist, it just hasn't been defined for the public. And no one's going to define it if Microsoft doesn't. Millions of people use Windows-based PCs at home and work everyday. If you're using a PC from any of the Microsoft OEMs and Vista and Windows Mobile and any of the Windows Live features, then congratulations, you're living the PC lifestyle! Are you excited? Did you even know you were doing it? Probably not. And that's the problem.
For its retail stores to survive, Microsoft has to define and market the PC lifestyle. It needs to give customers an "experience" where they learn how their software, hardware and services all connect in their homes (and how that can carry over into work) and thus feel better about themselves. The stores will fail if they are just a place to hawk Xboxes, Zunes and Office 2007.
In Microsoft's defense, it is taking baby steps to show and explain the PC lifestyle through advertising. The much-belated "I'm a PC" TV spots were uplifting, but too broad. They offered no specifics about PC use.
The latest chapter in the "Windows: Life without Walls" ad campaign called "The Rookies" gets specific. The spots, running regularly on network TV, show kids using Windows Live Photo Gallery to download, enhance and share photos. There have been three spots: 4 ½ year old Kylie, 7-year-old Alexa and 8-year-old Adam. Kylie, cute as a button, downloads and brightens a photo of her fish and e-mails it to her parents. By the time we get to Adam, he's setting his photo slideshow on his PC to music and then "screening this puppy for ya" on a flat-screen TV.
The tagline for the ads: It's That Easy. Yep, so easy a kid can do it. The spots will make middle-aged technophobes feel stupid; however they do successfully market ease of use and interoperability, two areas Microsoft would be wise to hammer home with in-person demos in its retail stores.
Microsoft is all-too aware of the PC lifestyle conundrum based on some minute-long promotional videos on Microsoft's site called "The Possibilities."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
The 30 best Safari extensions -- so far
-
Apple and Google disagree over licensing of essential patents
-
Monash Uni reduces IT teams after consolidation project
-
FTC warns makers of background checking apps
-
QLD govt demands answers after pay glitch
-
Prepare Your Enterprise for the Mobile Revolution: Boost the Bottom Line with Mobile UC
This white paper will highlight the changes in the mobile workplace; outline the benefits of unified communications (UC) and Fixed-Mobile Convergence (FMC) for mobile workers; identify the key market trends and business challenges IT managers must pay attention to now and into the future; and offer best practices for choosing a solution that will deliver clear ROI. -
A Governance Guide for Hybrid SharePoint Migrations
Cloud-based computing represents a powerful new option for managing enterprise content, offering increased flexibility, efficiency, and reduced cost for IT infrastructure, data storage, and applications. However, for a variety of business and technical reasons, most organisations will take a phased approach to adopting cloud-based services, which will require them to continue to maintain their on-premises SharePoint environments during the transition. This white paper, written by Chris Beckett from SharePoint Bits, discusses some of the benefits and risks of hybrid SharePoint deployments, and presents governance considerations that are essential for ensuring a successful migration. -
Email Encryption/Decryption and Signing integrated into a comprehensive content security solution
Clearswift’s SECURE Email Gateway provides an easy to use approach to providing secure email conversations. The technology enables customers to provide the privacy, authenticity and integrity of the communication that secure messaging offers, but without the complexity and high administration cost of other systems. The Clearswift SECURE Email Gateway with integrated encryption technology enables business to communicate with confidence and protects them from the risk of sensitive data loss.
-
Interoperability of Enterprise Software and Applications
-
Master Visually Optimizing PC Performance
-
Photoshop 7 Bible
-
Iphone for Dummies®, 2nd Edition
-
Local Area Networks
-
Digital Multimedia 2E + Kerlow/ Art of 3D Computer Animation and Effects 3E
-
Principles of Network & System Administration 2E
-
Linux for Windows Administrators
-
Computer Networking











Comments
Post new comment