7.3.2013 Update
Update from ABC News' Joanna Stern.
AdAge has a copy of a print ad that Motorola will be rolling out about the Moto X.
The key phrase: "Designed by you. Assembled in America."
What does it mean?
Update from ABC News' Joanna Stern.
____Motorola's upcoming phone called the Moto X will allow users to fully customize the look of the device with different colors and an engraving, sources have told ABC News. The Google-owned company's new 500,000-foot factory in Texas will enable it to deliver the personalized device to buyers within days of placing the order.
Through a website, buyers will be able to select from a palette of different colors. One color can be used for the back case and another can be selected for the trim of the phone. Users will also be able to engrave a name or message on the back cover as well as upload a personal photo through the site to be used as the wallpaper on the phone's screen, according to people familiar with the rollout.
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The biggest tricks of the phone come with what Motorola has been doing with the hardware sensors, sources say. Instead of having to fumble to find the camera icon or button, users will be able to flick the phone to launch the camera. There are also added voice capabilities, which leverage Google's advanced voice recognition technology. The phone is said to be smart enough to know when you are driving and will automatically launch the speakerphone function.
AdAge has a copy of a print ad that Motorola will be rolling out about the Moto X.
The ad will be run as a full-page spread in the July 3 editions of The New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post, Motorola said. It's Motorola's first ad for its upcoming Moto X smartphone, and the copy and timing emphasize the rebranded company's emphasis on freedom.
Behind it was Motorola's new creative agency of record is independent shop Droga5, which won the business without a pitch. Assisting on the creative and strategy for the campaign will be Publicis Groupe's Digitas.
Moto X will be "the first smartphone that you can design yourself," the copy says, which promises that users will be able to design phones as "unique" as their personalities.
"Smartphones are very different than other tech products a consumer owns," Mr. Wallace said. "They're closer to shoes or a watch. You carry it with you everywhere you go. Everyone sees what phone you're carrying and they judge you on it. Yet, it's the one thing you carry that's the least customizable."
Mr. Wallace declined to comment on exactly which Moto X aspects will be available for personalization (and the ad doesn't show the phone), but that its part of injecting what he called a "Googley attitude" into the company's operations and brand image. The emergence on a (literally) colorful new Motorola started last week when the company debuted its new logo last week.
The key phrase: "Designed by you. Assembled in America."
What does it mean?