If Ask.com hasn't gotten much attention because of their search engine lately, they're at least raising eyebrows through new (and kind of cerebral) ad campaigns. An algorithm that "constantly finds Jesus" but can't really find itself is beside the point – it's all about engaging the public and rousing curiosity, says Ask's VP of marketing.
There have been billboard sightings in New York, LA, and San Francisco – weird billboards with weird sentences and no explanation.
Sentences like:
The Algorithm Is From Jersey
The Algorithm Constantly Finds Jesus
That last one has caused more question marks than its weird predecessors. Some thought it was some kind of drive-by religious peddling. Others went the opposite way, wondering if it was making light of entire faith.
But they had one thought in common once they realized it was an Ask.com campaign: "What are they thinking?"
Says Bruce Clay's
When we asked Ask about it, the response was akin to "what's the big deal?" In fact, Ask.com CEO Jim Lanzone and Greg Ott, Ask's VP of marketing, seem to barely remember even mentioning Jesus.
"At Ask.com,"
Yeah, but, we were asking about the Jesus thing.
"We never thought people would be as curious about it as they are," Ott told Murdok. "[The campaign] has gotten some great attention and we feel pretty good about it."
Yeah, but, hasn't anybody yelled at you yet?
"We haven't gotten too much feedback," Ott said, "The most interesting places we've seen talking about it were Valleywag and Flickr."
Hmmm. Guess I need to work on Crispin Porter + Bogusky.
Though we're pretty sure we remember Ask getting at least a little flack over the
Okay, enough about the revolution. Let's get back to the Jesus thing. The slogan seems at least a little risky, especially if the billboards start popping up outside of the blue states. Ott says the Ask marketing team didn't see any risk in it, nor have they seen any negative response.
Even so, the billboards in question seem doomed to urban life as a nationwide billboard campaign would be "cost-prohibitive."
They're also kind of Bible-Belt-prohibitive, too, but Ask isn't sure why.
In a humorous twist, if one wanted to learn more about Ask's algorithm promotion, they might want to use Google. Searches for the now notorious phrase on Ask only brought back Google's 933 results.
To be fair, though, only search nerds use quotes around their queries.





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