The Ultimate Importance of Fun
When we talk to teens, and we talk to them a lot, they tell us their biggest motivation for doing anything is fun.
They go to shopping malls for fun. Football games for fun. Facebook for fun. MySpace for fun. YouTube for fun. They watch fun television programs. Like fun movies. Come to think of it, it’s not much different for adults.
Nothing supports the need for a fun factor more than social networks and YouTube is a prime example. Marketers lust after the views that amateurs get by accident. The “Charlie Bit Me…Again” video above had 118 million views. But not all amateurs are any more successful than the pros who think they can make their YouTube channel the next NBC.
Without fun, your video will be limited by those searching expressly for you.
Facebook is much the same. Take the State of Nebraska’s Facebook page. It has 1,587 friends and fans. Not bad. But when you look at the page it is a never ending list of governmental announcements. Should Nebraskans be interested? Probably, but it’s not fun. Contrast that with the fan page for Nebraska Football. It has over 52,000 users who access the page at least once a month. Fun, as well as life and death.
The fun factor influences our job satisfaction, life, marriages and leisure. It’s why we spend mone on vacations, dining, dancing, concerts and sporting events. It’s why we celebrate when we win and cry when we lose.
If we can harness fun in our communications, they become far more effective. Hopefully, Charlie helped this post be a little more fun.











