OpenAI is using old YouTube-style tricks to win fans fast. Tom Orbach shows how playful ideas are beating boring marketing.
Most marketing feels too forced and fake. Brands keep talking at people instead of making them join in. This article shows how small, fun actions that involve users create loyalty and attention.
Tom Orbach shares five clever marketing examples that prove people want to take part, not just watch. Youform added an “Ask AI what it thinks about us” button on its site. It looks brave but is actually coded to get nice answers, making users feel engaged while keeping control.
OpenAI sent real coins to their top users, just like YouTube’s silver play buttons. A physical prize makes people proud, so they post it online. Nespresso made a “Russian roulette” decaf game with mixed coffee pods. If you can’t tell which one is decaf, they’ve proved their point.
Other smart ideas include a programming book printed in dark mode to match how developers work, and “Draw a Fish” - a simple AI game where users draw, compete, and vote. It went viral with millions of players because it turned fun into content.