Microsoft's Disruptive Xbox 360 Marketing

Forrester Research published a piece that helps explain just what it is that Microsoft was trying to accomplish by eschewing E3 and announcing their product on MTV last night.

As we've noted in the past, and as Forrester corroborates, E3 and CES are where the big product announcements are made. Microsoft's decision to launch their console prior to E3 represents a deliberate strategic move that accomplishes several key objectives. Forrester calls it a "brave move" that allows Microsoft to:

  1. "Side step the industry shindig and talk directly to potential consumers": Given what we know about the expected
    timing of the Xbox 360 release (November), it's early to be putting this product directly in front of consumers.
    The direct-to-consumer marketing hype generally occurs a few months prior to console launch. Microsoft's early
    launch risks "killing its existing hardware line sales and stunting software sales" as consumers begin to delay
    purchases in anticipation of the $300 to $400 they'll have to shell out later this year. In other words, Microsoft
    appears willing to jeopardize first-generation Xbox sales in order to ensure the success of the Xbox 360. They're
    hurting themselves, but they hope to hurt Sony and Nintendo even more by locking consumers into an affinity for the
    Xbox 360 earlier than either of these competitors.

  • ?Reduce the classic five-year game console cycle?: We have to disagree with Forrester on this one. Microsoft
    doesn?t want to shorten console lifecycles. That would be suicidal, as manufacturers tend to lose money on hardware
    in order to reap big rewards on software sales. A 5-year console lifecycle allows Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo to
    milk those software revenues before they have to shell out again on costly console development and production. What
    Forrester really meant to say is that Microsoft doesn?t want to be the last one out of the gate this time around.
    They made that mistake by releasing the Xbox in 2001 giving Sony a huge lead in living room penetration.

  • ?Build a frenzy of community speculation and support?: Well, duh. Which console manufacturer doesn?t want this?
    Still, Forrester gives Microsoft?s marketing machine deserves props for building ?a frenzy? over the past six
    months ?carefully fed by occasional press quotes from Bill Gates, leaked images, and viral messaging spread via
    Microsoft?s ?ourcolony.net? site.?

  • ?Offset some of its negative branding in the PC market?: According to Forrester, Microsoft?s approach with this
    gamers-first approach should win them the goodwill of the consumer market which tends to view Microsoft as the
    intractable monopolist.

  • ?Break the new console out of the gaming ghetto?: Microsoft has signed an agreement with Samsung to ?co-locate
    next-generation Xboxes with [Samsung?s] high-definition TVs in retail stores? which helps the company?s product
    escape the crowded gaming aisles and sit on shelves free of Sony and Nintendo consoles. The MTV launch is also an
    attempt to broaden the gamer market by changing the ?games are for geeks? stereotype that still tends to plague the
    industry and depress sales. Microsoft?s taking the Xbox 360 to MTV is like that seminal moment in Bill Clinton?s
    1992 campaign in which he played the Sax on MTV and answered questions about his underwear. He became hip and made
    politics an acceptable activity for the cool kids. Clinton?s campaign credited that appearance with giving the
    campaign a boost, and you can bet that the MS marketing gurus were thinking the same thing when they put this event
    together.

Did it work? Maybe, maybe not.

Reader commentary on the Joystiq/Engadget live coverage of the unveiling of the Xbox 360 was, for the most part, not positive, but then we?re not exactly the audience that Microsoft was trying to reach with the infomercial. They?re trying to reach the so-called mass-market teen who wouldn?t be caught dead visiting a site like Joystiq or Engadget lest he be branded a geek. It?s too soon to tell if the gains in that consumer segment will outweigh the losses from the techno-savvy consumer.

The link below leads to the Forrester research piece, but free registration is required in order to read it.

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