Forum Discussion
Microsoft - Do this to gain market share from Google Chrome
Could change it to an upper case blue E
Would look & convey contemporary cutting-edge tech & design & express it as being a new chapter/era for the browser
Here's a couple of thoughts I threw together
My feeling is it ought to remain blue. Some continuity is good marketing. Change the look, but, keep the colour. (IE can, still, be very easily forgotten 😉) AND, the blue is the OS colour & Edge is its browser; for that reason, alone, staying with the blue makes sense to me.
Cheers,
Drew
Drew1903 I'm sorry, but no.
Microsoft had it's chance with legacy and continuity when it first introduced Microsoft Edge. Three years later and the browser has never reached its potential. Any other company other than Microsoft would have shuttered the project and closed their doors in disgrace.
If you're that committed to trying to recapture the market share Microsoft has lost over the years you're going to need to start with a clean slate.
- tomscharbachMay 06, 2019Bronze Contributor
Eternal_Optimist "Microsoft had it's chance with legacy and continuity when it first introduced Microsoft Edge. ... If you're that committed to trying to recapture the market share Microsoft has lost over the years you're going to need to start with a clean slate."
You're right.
(1) Microsoft needs to bring Edge Chromium out from under the disastrous legacy of Internet Explorer, a browser that dropped from 60% market share a decade ago to under 10% at present, retaining the 10% only because enterprise customers still use it. Consumers don't and for good reason.
Edge (Classic) gained little traction in terms of market share, I suspect, because users saw Edge (Classic) as an (somewhat) improved release of IE, rather than a different browser with remarkable functionality.
I suspect that Microsoft's wisest marketing choice would be to cut the cord and brand Edge Chromium as a brand new browser, neither Internet Explorer not Edge (Classic) nor Chrome. I think that it Microsoft had done that, rather than branding Edge (Classic) as an IE replacement, Chrome might not have gained an additional 10% market share since Edge (Classic) was introduced in 2016.
If Microsoft is determined to keep the Edge brand, so be it, but then Microsoft needs to do what Firefox did when it released Firefox Quantum -- it marketed the rewritten browser as brand new, and marketed it under the Firefox Quantum brand, suggesting that the new browser was a quantum leap from the old.
(2) Branding is important, but it isn't everything. Microsoft needs to make Edge Chromium a significantly better browser than Chrome, in do so in a way that catches consumer's attention and offers them a compelling reason to switch from Chrome. I don't know what that compelling reason might be, but my guess is that market researchers could give Microsoft a strong hint.
Microsoft is not asking consumers to just switch their computer browser from Chrome to Edge Chromium. At a bare minimum, it is asking consumers to switch browsers both on their computers and on their Android devices. And more realistically, Microsoft is asking consumers to pull out of the Google ecosystem (Google sync, Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Cloud, et al) and move over to the Microsoft ecosystem.That is going to be a jump for folks tied into Chrome in the world of interconnected devices. Folks like that -- 65% of the computer browser market currently and a higher percentage of the Android market -- are going to need a compelling reason to make the switch.
- Drew1903May 06, 2019Silver Contributor
tomscharbach
Much that same as it's impossible to have some Folks be interested in or excited about Chrome/Google. Works both ways.
And, even though it was indeed touted as replacing IE, I do forget about IE or that people, in their minds, tie back to it. Myself, I fail to make any connection with Edge (even if there is) back to IE. They are SO different that I will agree, THAT is when the logo should have changed.
Anyway, I sort of thought the suggestion of an upper case E would imply a departure, whilst, still, being able to say, "E is for Edge".
Or it implies the browser grew up, lol It can have a big E, now LOL.
IE is, now, rarely mentioned or used and it will eventually be gone-gone. The few who are, still, using IE, are oft the same few who haven't yet moved the heck off Win7. But, sure change the logo for this, now. It's overdue. Should have changed when Edge was (1st) born, now that you mention it. My error it seems, wasn't aware attitude towards IE would have anything but a positive view towards Edge; Edge makes IE look so bad.
Thanks for enlightenment.
Cheers,
Drew