The Mercury News Weekend

PC makers to sponsor joint ad campaign

- By Michael Liedtke

SAN FRANCISCO — So many people have gone so long without buying a new personal computer that the industry’s biggest players are trying something different: a quirky advertisin­g campaign. The $70 million marketing push aims to highlight how much better PCs have gotten since smartphone­s and tablets came along.

Rival PC makers Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Lenovo are joining forces with Microsoft and Intel to revive languishin­g PC sales with ads that don’t promote specific brands. They’ll be punctuated with the slogan, “PC does what?”

It’s a concept similar to earlier campaigns by beef and dairy producers that sought to extol the virtues of their products.

The PC campaign will tout the increased versatilit­y of laptops that have slimmed down while adding more powerful chips, longer-lasting batteries and higher resolution screens that also respond to touch commands. Many of the screens also detach from keyboards so they can function as tablets, too. Most new PCs are now powered by Windows 10, which Microsoft bills as its best operating system yet.

“With this perfect storm of innovation, we felt it was the time to tell our story,” said Steve Fund, Intel’s chief marketing officer. “People think having something good is good enough because they are unaware of how much better the PCs are now.”

The campaign, scheduled to begin Monday in the U.S. and China, will include TV commercial­s on major networks and online ads. The participat­ing companies will split the $70 million cost of the campaign, which will run through November in an effort to entice holiday shoppers.

The ads are primarily targeting consumers who haven’t bought a new PC in at least four years — a potential audience of about 400 million people, estimated technology industry analyst Patrick Moorhead.

The PC push comes amid a 31⁄2-year decline in sales that has been driven by a shift to smartphone­s and tablets able to handle many of the tasks that previously required desktop and laptop computers.

Even the late July release of Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system couldn’t reverse the slide. Worldwide shipments of PCs fell by 8 percent from the previous year during the three-month period ending in September, according to the research group Gartner. Lenovo, HP and Dell were the top three PC makers in the quarter.

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