The 5 Rules of Business Humor
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This is another guest post from Brad Shorr - a really great writer and marketer who is an expert on using humor in business. His first post was Don’t Train a Duck, but Do Use Cartoons to Build Your Brand.

Be careful about how you mix cartooning (or any other form of humor) with business. As I mentioned in my earlier post, cartoons transform brands. Unfortunately, that transformation can be for the worse if you take the wrong approach. Following these 5 rules will keep humor working for you, not against you.
- Do Not Make Fun of Your Customers. Have you seen the V8® Juice commercials where people get a thump on the forehead because they were too stupid to drink the product? I hate them. Is the idea to shame a person into buying by branding him clueless? Doesn’t motivate me to buy, much less become loyal to the brand.
- Do Not Make Fun of Your Industry. Remember the WaMu commercials featuring a group of stuffy, doddering old bankers babbling witlessly to a hip, casually dressed WaMu employee? Risky. By stereotyping the banking industry as old-fashioned, WaMu may alienate large segments of the market; in this case, anyone over forty. On top of that, given our current banking crisis, old-fashioned conservative values might be more prized than ever in a bank, even among the young. In any case, disparaging your own industry begs the question, then why are you in it? Crusades are serious business - if you’re on one to change your industry, why are you making jokes? Doesn’t compute.
- Do Not Use Stereotypes. Building on the last point, it’s wise to stay away from stereotyping of any kind. Even today, offensive stereotypes have a way of creeping in to business humor. Why? Because often, there’s a fine line between funny and offensive. For example, I did a cartoon for a book pitch where an extremely old woman with a walker is at a used car lot. A moustache-twirling salesman is trying to sell her a souped-up sports car, telling her she’ll never be late for bingo again. Is that ageism? Used car salesmanism? Even a cartoon as innocent as this could easily backfire, so steer clear. (Car puns intended.) I believe you can be plenty funny without being offensive, so why take a chance?
- Do Be Brief. As funnyman William Shakespeare once said, brevity is the soul of wit. Many a good joke has been ruined by driving it into the ground. Take the earlier V8® and WaMu examples - as a one-time shot, either commercial would have been amusing and appealing. But beating us over the head with it quickly becomes annoying.
- Do Repeat Yourself. As with most other marketing activities, repetition is crucial. A one-off cartoon might attract some short-term buzz, but to really get the job done, do a series. What you want is for customers to see your newsletter in their email in-box and think, “Great! Another newsletter from XYZ. I can’t wait to see what cartoon they’ve got for me this month.”
Make sense? What other rules of business humor would you add to this list?
Here’s more samples of Brad’s business cartoons, and you can contact Brad about using cartoons in your marketing or call him at (630) 845-1778.



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Another problem is that humor can be remembered more than the point you’re trying to get across.
Stephanie, that is an excellent point. How often does this conversation play out –
Jack - I saw this hilarious commercial last night!
Jill - What was it for?
Jack? I can’t remember.
I can’t explain exactly why that happens. Repetition is part of the answer, but also, the humor has to somehow be clearly about the company/product/service.
Brad Shorrs last blog post..Shifting Values Support Business Blogs
Great roundup, Brad! But as usual, I can’t leave well enough alone…
How about this for #6: Make sure the humor is genuine. Too many times the humor ends up being forced, if you know what I mean. It has to reach people on a level that triggers their funny bone, not screams at them: this is funny, insert laugh here.
Robert Hruzeks last blog post..The Day I Decided to, er, Get Help
Wow… those V8 commercials are just brutally unfunny. I was never really sure what the message was there.
The rule you left out was make sure other people think it is funny too.
I thought the same thing as Robert being genuine is important.
If something gets me roaring - it’s wonderful
I also think humor is sometimes in the eyes of the beholder ( is that the right phrase?) beauty is in the eyes of the beholder?
What I might think is really funny, someone else may not
Robert/Mother Earth, the genuine factor is huge. I sometimes wonder if banks flop with humor because it doesn’t come naturally to them. No stereoptyping intended, but bankers deal with high level, important stuff, and people tend not to want to joke around about money. Bob/Mother Earth, testing material on some good sounding boards is an excellent idea, though I don’t think you can expect to make everybody laugh. Each of us has our own unique sense of humor. Is that why movie comedies have such a hard time attracting mass audiences?
Brad Shorrs last blog post..Sales Rep Blogs - Branding Opportunity … or Not
I think you may have a point about the bank ads. Always hated the bad attitude displayed in these and similar ones (like the PC vs. Mac ads Apple is running).
Movies is another one - I walk through the video store and have a hard time believing 99.9% of the ones in the “comedy” section are - actually - funny. I mean, c’mon!
*sigh*
Robert Hruzeks last blog post..Great Quotes #23
I’ve noticed recently that inside jokes seem to be making their way into commercials.
ex. a company will make a commercial with a certain humorous plot line and only the people who get it are already using the service or something similar, so they end up not bringing in any new customers at all.
Troys last blog post..Why?!