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Motorola's Moto E 'Press Conference' Is Like Nothing You've Ever Seen When coming up with your own marketing and press materials, remember to be creative while also keeping your audience in mind.

By Emily Price

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Emily Price
Motorola E press conference in a box.

Instead of holding a big press conference in New York or at Mobile World Congress next week, Motorola tried a new way of announcing its new Moto E smartphone Wednesday: A press conference in a box.

Wednesday morning, boxes were delivered to mobile press around the globe. Inside was a 3-D model of a press conference, complete with a tiny stage and cutout of Motorola's president and COO, Rick Osterloh.

Seriously. Here's what it looked like:

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The press conference was prerecorded and available for reporters to watch at their own speed, focusing on what they were most interested in first. Once it was over, your review unit was on the stage for you to grab and play with, if you weren't already doing so during the presentation. The back of the box stowed some of the accessories set to come with the device such as colored bands and a grip shell case.

Entrepreneurs should take note of the creativity behind Motorola's Moto E press outreach. "More companies should problem solve through their marketing challenges like Moto probably did with this one," says Eric Samson, founder of the marketing consulting firm Group8A. By thinking through how they were going to get coverage for the phone during one of the biggest weeks in mobile news (with Mobile World Congress starting in a few short days), the company came up with a truly unique solution.

"We took the same principals for the press conference as we did for the product," Adrienne Hayes, Motorola's head of marketing and communication tells Entrepreneur.

The new Moto E has a 4.5-inch display, quad-core processor, and a battery the company says makes it capable of running all day on a single charge. The unlocked phone ships running Lollipop, the latest version of Android. Extra software allows you to launch the phone's camera by just flicking your wrist, and the company's Active Display feature shows you your notifications as you're pulling your phone out of your pocket.

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It's designed to be both personalized and simplistic, which was also the idea behind the virtual press conference. "We thought this was a much more convenient format for the end user," says Hayes. "The first thing was putting the audience at the center and in mind first, and we thought that doing this would be a lot more convenient for the media and solve the pain point of having to go to numerous press conferences and running around at one of the industry's biggest trade shows next week."

Motorola Moto E conference in a box

Motorola Moto E conference in a box.
Image credit: Emily Price

The concept of the press conference in a box was actually something the team had been kicking around for a while, but an idea that really made sense with this launch. The Moto E is the company's most affordable smartphone. Doing a press conference this way was more cost-effective than holding a large event, both for the company and attendees who would have to shell out cash to fly to a location-based event.

It's an idea that Samson thinks will pay off even more. "You get this fun little package and it's unique and exciting, I think emotionally it puts the journalist in a happier, more positive place, and I think that will definitely effect their reaction to the product."

Samson thinks that the move might not only garner more press for the phone than it might have gotten otherwise, that the press will be better for the phone since it was presented in such a fun way and without the stress of travel surrounding it.

"You increase your reach maybe tenfold," he says. Reach that could mean bigger sales for the entry-level phone.

The new Moto E is on sale now, priced at $149 for the LTE version and $119 for the 3G model.

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Emily Price

Technology Writer

Emily Price is a tech reporter based in San Francisco, Calif. She specializes in mobile technology, social media, apps, and startups. Her work has appeared in a number of publications including The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, PC World, Macworld, CNN and Mashable.

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