WebProNews

Tag: #doing

  • Bing’s New ‘Summer of Doing’ Site Pushes Social Search

    Here’s a strange sequence of events: no sooner did I post that teaser from Bing’s Facebook page about something being announced today, possibly at Microsoft’s big media event, a post in Bing’s Search Blog appeared in my RSS reader. That in itself isn’t strange, but when I click on the link to visit the page of the actual blog post, the link is dead. So was the blog not supposed to be updated just yet, hence it being taken down (and does the fact that it possibly appeared before it was scheduled to qualify the information as a leak)?

    The timestamp on the post, according to my reader, is 12:21PM EST. Authored by Bing Marketing Manager Maggie Adams, the full blog post follows:

    As part of the Bing Summer of Doing, we are launching a new site today to inspire you to make the most of your summer. Every day we’ll showcase a new daily activity to motivate you to learn more while giving you a chance to win cool prizes. Check out the site each day at bing.com/doing, or follow along at #summerofdoing.

    Every week we will have a new theme including DIY-ing, eating, celebrating, giving back, wander-lusting, riding, jamming, and more. Each day of the week will present a new Bing search and new opportunity to be inspired to do something.

    Bing Summer of Doing

    For example, for DIY-ing week, you can hone your DIY skills including, yarn bombing, home brewing, vertical gardening, canning, and cheese making. For eating week, you can nosh and nibble your way via food trucking, dim summing, locavoring, wine tasting, picnicking and more.

    Each week you have a chance to win fabulous prizes. From the chance to become a master chef via culinary classes, receiving an amazing DIY kit, winning an amazing party, or making a difference in your community – the Bing Summer of Doing has you covered.

    Check it out and good luck!

    – Maggie Adams, Marketing Manager, Bing

    While the blog post appears to have been taken down, bing.com/doing is a live site. Here’s a screenshot of the homepage:

    Bing Summer of Doing Homepage

    As you can see in the homepage, the site is geared towards prompting people to do more physical or manual activities as a product of what they search for on Bing with incentives promised through Bing Rewards. Today’s “doing” image pertains to do-it-yourself projects.

    Clicking on the “doing” image, I’m prompted to sign into Bing with my Facebook account. Everything’s becoming clear now: Bing is not only trying to encourage users to be a little more active this summer (ironically, away from their computer) but is promoting its new social search feature simultaneously. Once I’m redirected to a search of “diy crafts” on Bing, I see the following box appear:

    Bing Summer of Doing Daily Word

    So by trying to do more physical or creative activities this summer, and by incorporating my online social network with these activities, I’m eligible for weekly prizes.

    Very crafty indeed, Bing.

    As a postscript, we contacted Bing for comment on the new initiative/webpage, but as of this article’s publication we haven’t received any information.

    Again, not confirming this Bing blog announcement was released prematurely, but it’s conspicuous absence now seems to suggest it wasn’t supposed to go live just yet. Stay tuned for Microsoft’s conference later today to see if they push the new bing.com/doing site or if this indeed is separate from the media event.

  • Bing, Lenovo, DoSomething.org Really Want Teens to Not Be Lazy This Summer

    Bing continues its mission to get people #doing more as it has teamed up with Lenovo and DoSomething.org to launch “The Hunt: 11 Days of Doing,” a call to action for youngsters to get up off of their keisters and do some good in their communities over the summer.

    Teens in the United States apparently have a motivation problem when it comes to volunteering. A surprising 93% of them say they want to volunteer, but only 22% actually end up doing it; the other 71% say they didn’t get around to volunteering because, as is their typical adolescent wont, nobody asked them to volunteer (although that kinda defeats the purpose of volunteering, kiddos). Trying to tap into this unmotivated potential, DoSomething.org has launched a website for “The Hunt” that hopes to get teens started with effecting some positive changes in their communities. By working with the technological implements that teenagers seem addicted to these days, the companies will have participants communicate their progress throughout the 11-day challenge via cell phones, the internet, and social media.

    Bing Senior Product Manager Karin Muskopf predicts that the integration of social media as a tool for building communities will help promote activism. “Bing’s new social features will play an integral role in helping participants search for the clues, connect with their Facebook friends for advice and see what experts recommend in order to quickly research and tackle the daily challenges,” she said.

    Challenges in “The Hunt: 11 Days of Doing” will focus on humanitarian issues related to the environment, energy and recycling, poverty, violence and bullying, animal welfare, and more. Participants in the challenge will also be eligible for prizes like Lenovo Ultrabooks and scholarships.

    The challenge has also enlisted the help of several celebrities like Hillary Duff, Cody Simpson, Rachael Leigh Cook, and this young lady, Shenae Grimes, who the internet tells me is on the relaunched version of Beverly Hills, 90210 (which the internet also tells me is simply titled 90210).

    Video: Bing Teams with DoSomething.org and Lenovo to Kick-Off “The Hunt: 11 Days of Doing”

    While this is generally good for the heart and soul of humanity, it also affords Bing a unique opportunity to introduce its newly launched design, the three-column format that integrates information from Facebook and Twitter into search results, to a young and likely obstinate generation of internet users. And I only say obstinate because what teenagers don’t look forward to velcroing themselves to the couch for the duration of their summer break and happily doing nothing? If Bing can break the pattern of irresistible laziness of adolescents, then toppling Google should be a walk in the park.

  • Bing Is For #Doing A New Ad Campaign

    Bing Is For #Doing A New Ad Campaign

    Earlier today, Microsoft took to Bing’s Twitter account to announce the next ad campaign for their search engine:

    Bing is for #doing. Catch @KevinPearce’s amazing story here & see why he embodies the true spirit of #doing: http://t.co/YI2kGCua ^dr 8 hours ago via Sprinklr · powered by @socialditto

    As described in a blog post earlier today, Microsoft has enlisted several winter sports athletes doing amazing things in order to inspire you to use Bing. The ads will start showing up in your world this weekend when Bing presents the story of Kevin Pearce, an American snowboarder who suffered a traumatic brain injury in a snowboarding accident yet overcame the accident and eventually resumed snowboarding.

    The spot will premiere this Sunday during NFC’s Championship game (that’s a professional football thing) and will appear on the air during the X Games coverage on ESPN. You can preview the video below, courtesy of Bing’s blog:

    <a href='http://video.msn.com/?vid=e0b69573-e6bb-4d7d-b1e9-a949d063e263&#038;mkt=en-us&#038;src=SLPl:embed::uuids' target='_new' title='Bing is for #Doing: Kevin Pearce’s Story'>Video: Bing is for #Doing: Kevin Pearce’s Story</a>

    The Bing Team goes on to explain how why Bing is the search engine of choice for walkers, not talkers. “Bing has traditionally highlighted the decisions people make and now, with this new campaign, Bing will illustrate how decisions enable people to go beyond searching to doing.” And then:

    Because Bing is for people who do; for people like you who are always doing more and don’t have time to sit still. So whether you’re on your PC or on your phone, Bing has features designed not just to connect you to the information you are looking for, but also to help you get things done right on Bing.com. From making dinner reservations to sharing a link with one of your Facebook friends, it can all happen within Bing. With Bing, you simply get results you can trust that will get you quickly from searching to doing. Bing is for doing.

    In an unrelated aside, will people please start saying “_____ is for doing” instead of that brain-dead adage, “Git-R-Done”? Please?