Stop Microsoft
All Things Microsoft => Microsoft as a Company => Topic started by: worker201 on 4 January 2010, 12:50
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The Microsoft building in downtown Bellevue is advertising even more than usual. It looked similar to this picture, except the Bing lights were green instead of white when I drove by on New Year's Eve. Although I can't confirm this, I believe the complaints department is located in this building.
(http://www.downtownbellevue.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/bing-bellevue.jpg)
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The city of Bellevue can complain about the compromising of the skyline over there ;)
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Certainly is a "cheap" way to get "big" advertising cheap and dirty. Although you'd have to somehow equate "bing" being something relevant to computers, and if you didn't know what bing is, and you wanted to find out, you would probably end up googling what it was.
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Count on Microsoft to leave lights on in empty offices overnight as a way to make money.
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I wonder if the building was vandalised by a load of climate change protesters.
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I wonder if the building was vandalised by a load of climate change protesters.
"They're LED lights, we promise!"
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Honestly, if I saw that driving by I wouldn't even notice it; just looks like random lights. On top of that, even being a computer user who knows what Bing is, I wouldn't equate it with the search engine -- just assume it was someone's inside joke.
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Yeah, I somewhat agree. There are too many other lights on to really notice it easily. But I will assume that most locals know that as the Microsoft building, so they may be able to equate something with Bing and Microsoft, but mostly likely not as I mentioned earlier.
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Although you can't see it well in the picture I linked to (which I did not take), it does say "Microsoft" in the upper lefthand corner of the building. Which is quite clear from I-405. Also, when I drove by on New Year's Eve, the lights that spell out bing were green, as opposed to the normal whiteish yellow in the rest of the windows. It was immediately obvious to me that they were spelling bing with window lights.
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Certainly is a "cheap" way to get "big" advertising cheap and dirty. Although you'd have to somehow equate "bing" being something relevant to computers, and if you didn't know what bing is, and you wanted to find out, you would probably end up googling what it was.
Lol that's true, but marketing campaigns don't need to give consumers information about the product to be considered effective. They're just advertising the brand. People who know bing might notice it, might even tell people what those crazy bastards at microsoft are using their lights for, etc etc and it just increases awareness.
I had a great example I wanted to post here about a week ago but it escapes me (there are lots of examples), so I just made my post anyhow.