On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 00:09:33 +0200 Vincent Untz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The idea is interesting, and we might be able to change the schedule > for this. However, what we really need is the opinion of the > marketing team: if we do this, we have to get a really clear and > understandable message. > Maybe, you could elaborate why a having "clear and understandable message" ought to be a prerequisite for moving the schedule by one week? I'm really not sure why you want that. Maybe I misunderstand the "message" term, here? Are you thinking about a topic and headline for the relase? Or a kind of slogan? Whatever, there are many journalists at Cebit. So, by changing the schedule, journalists are more likely to a) visit the GNOME booth because of this, and b) report about the GNOME release because they are there, anyway. IIRC, the German team already mixed the GNOME release with CeBIT in the past. This was done for GNOME 2.14, 2.16, and 2.18. See, for example [1] and [2] (in German). OTOH, Cebit will produce lots of IT news, and the GNOME release might be overlooked when all the big companies make their annoucements. So, what we would need is NOT a special messeage (I really hope I interprete the term correctly) but a few reminders and motivators. For example, we would need to have a GNOME celebrity at the booth to make the annoucement or be ready for interviews. Stuff like that. So, in my opinion, if there's a plan by the German team to make the release at the Cebit a little bit of an event, then changing the schedule would be good thing. Of course, it would help if there's something special to report (a message) that improves chances to make a headline. But given the release model, we should not rely on it. Just my 2 cents. Cheers, Claus [1] http://www.zdnet.de/news/messen/cebit2006/software/0,39033477,39141623,00.htm?h [2] http://www.pc-magazin.de/common/nws/einemeldung.php?id=51050&type=0&nrubrik=&datum=2007.03.14 -- marketing-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
