On Mon, 2010-05-10 at 07:03 +0200, S.Kemter wrote:
Hello,
Am Montag, den 10.05.2010, 07:00 +0530 schrieb Shayon Mukherjee:
On 05/10/2010 06:56 AM, Ricardo Chung wrote:
I like the one from cboltz:
"openSUSE build service - we also work for our neighbors"
or
"openSUSE Build Service - a service for our neighbors too"
"Lets build together" ?
An who builds there "together"? Sascha asked for "Key messages" not for a slogan. The german goverment decided on time to give a lot of money for my education for press working. And I learned what a "statement" means.
Sirko is correct. There is a big difference between slogan and message. We seem to get lost in looking for cool phrases and we need to pull back on that. First and foremost, the message needs to be created. And the message is not a slogan or a phrase. It is a concept. It defines what we want our audience to know. If we come up with a slogan, great. Let it fall in naturally. But you cannot create a slogan without first defining the message.
First an entry then two or tree points why and then an outro
That means in our case.
I use openSUSE build service because (entry)
I can build on different architectures same time
and
it builds for several distributions too.
So u should try the openSUSE build service too.
The points between intro and outro are the key points and for them searches Sascha. I have only one idea for a third point "is easy available via web"
br gnokii
--
Check out http://en.opensuse.org/Marketing_Team/OBS#What_is_OBS_really.3F_.28Posting_s... which defines some of the key messages we want to get across. We can continue to build upon that if you have more input. But the message will ultimately drive how we frame many things, including publishing material, presentations, articles, and yes, eventually, even slogans. :-) But to come up with a slogan before the message is too premature. Bryen -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+help@opensuse.org