Google Stages E-mail Intervention After Microsoft Gmail Man Strikes

Microsoft uses the Gmail Man to bludgeon Google's messaging efforts, while Google stages e-mail interventions to lure users from Microsoft Live Hotmail and Yahoo Mail.

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2011-07-30

Google and Microsoft have just completed another salvo in their ongoing Web-based e-mail war.

Microsoft at a recent conference aired a video denigrating Gmail as a snooping application. One week later, Google offering to stage "e-mail interventions" for users who need rescuing from Microsoft Live Hotmail and other older Webmail apps.

Microsoft July 20 played a humorous video of the "Gmail Man" at its Microsoft Global Exchange sales conference for 12,000 attendees, according to ZDNet.

The unflattering clip, billed as the "opposite experience" of Microsoft's new Office 365 cloud computing suite, seizes on hysteria that dates back to 2005 by depicting Gmail as a messaging front for one big user data snooping operation.

That activity is exactly what Microsoft went after with "Gmail Man," a mock mailman covered in the Gmail messaging logos who snoops users messages. The video shows Gmail Man searching for keywords like "burning" and "sensation," in a female office worker's Gmail account.

One more memorable line from the video's jingle is: "His ads are unsolicited based on what you type, makes you want to ditch Gmail and go Office 365."

Gmail launched to beta April 1, 2004 and the company was soon accused of using the service as another excuse to deliver users ads based on their messages.

Google was cautious about rolling ads out on Gmail even though it always had the capability to do so. Now more ads than ever run in Gmail, using algorithms to match up marketing messages using keywords in users' messaging content.

Former Googler Cedric Beust commented about the Microsoft marketing message on his blog (via Google Operating System):

"It was a fascinating angle in 2005 while Gmail was still new and under all kinds of scrutiny, but today, who cares that your e-mails are automatically scanned, really? Even before Gmail, ISPs already had the ability to read all your e-mails, but it has never really stopped anyone from using the e-mail service of their choice. I predict that this ad will get people to talk more about Gmail than the product it's promoting (starting with myself).

Speaking of getting more people talking about Gmail, Google July 27 began officially encouraging its users to stage "e-mail interventions."

The idea is to get users to import contacts from Microsoft Live Hotmail, Yahoo Mail and other Webmail apps into Gmail.Two of the hooks include the fact that non-Gmail users can't conduct video chats or make calls, two distinct features in Gmail.

Here's how it works. Concerned friends of non-Gmail users navigate to emailintervention.com, sign in and identify contacts who aren't on Gmail, or typing in users' e-mail addresses.

The intervener then picks one of three intervention message templates ("straightforward," "concerned" or "embarrassed," and adds their own intervention video if they choose. Finally, the user sends the "customized email and follows up as needed." (see the instructional video here).

It's tempting to conclude e-mail intervention is a return salvo from Google, the latest of many skirmishes between the companies. However, a Google spokesperson told eWEEK e-mail intervention is not a response to the Gmail Man portrayal.

Still, the timing lent itself to another interesting salvo in the Microsoft-Google war over cloud computing. Google finds its Google Apps increasingly under fire from Microsoft, whose Office 365 just launched a few months ago.

Microsoft at a recent conference aired a video denigrating Gmail as a snooping application. One week later, Google offering to stage "e-mail interventions" for users who need rescuing from Microsoft Live Hotmail and other older Webmail apps.

Microsoft July 20 played a humorous video of the "Gmail Man" at its Microsoft Global Exchange sales conference for 12,000 attendees, according to ZDNet.

The unflattering clip, billed as the "opposite experience" of Microsoft's new Office 365 cloud computing suite, seizes on hysteria that dates back to 2005 by depicting Gmail as a messaging front for one big user data snooping operation.

That activity is exactly what Microsoft went after with "Gmail Man," a mock mailman covered in the Gmail messaging logos who snoops users messages. The video shows Gmail Man searching for keywords like "burning" and "sensation," in a female office worker's Gmail account.

One more memorable line from the video's jingle is: "His ads are unsolicited based on what you type, makes you want to ditch Gmail and go Office 365."

Gmail launched to beta April 1, 2004 and the company was soon accused of using the service as another excuse to deliver users ads based on their messages.

Google was cautious about rolling ads out on Gmail even though it always had the capability to do so. Now more ads than ever run in Gmail, using algorithms to match up marketing messages using keywords in users' messaging content.

Former Googler Cedric Beust commented about the Microsoft marketing message on his blog (via Google Operating System):

"It was a fascinating angle in 2005 while Gmail was still new and under all kinds of scrutiny, but today, who cares that your e-mails are automatically scanned, really? Even before Gmail, ISPs already had the ability to read all your e-mails, but it has never really stopped anyone from using the e-mail service of their choice. I predict that this ad will get people to talk more about Gmail than the product it's promoting (starting with myself).

Speaking of getting more people talking about Gmail, Google July 27 began officially encouraging its users to stage "e-mail interventions."

The idea is to get users to import contacts from Microsoft Live Hotmail, Yahoo Mail and other Webmail apps into Gmail.Two of the hooks include the fact that non-Gmail users can't conduct video chats or make calls, two distinct features in Gmail.

Here's how it works. Concerned friends of non-Gmail users navigate to emailintervention.com, sign in and identify contacts who aren't on Gmail, or typing in users' e-mail addresses.

The intervener then picks one of three intervention message templates ("straightforward," "concerned" or "embarrassed," and adds their own intervention video if they choose. Finally, the user sends the "customized email and follows up as needed." (see the instructional video here).

It's tempting to conclude e-mail intervention is a return salvo from Google, the latest of many skirmishes between the companies. However, a Google spokesperson told eWEEK e-mail intervention is not a response to the Gmail Man portrayal.

Still, the timing lent itself to another interesting salvo in the Microsoft-Google war over cloud computing. Google finds its Google Apps increasingly under fire from Microsoft, whose Office 365 just launched a few months ago.

Source: eWeek.com