Fun Factor

Unless you've just awakened from a Rip Van Winkle-style hibernation, you
probably heard that Microsoft released the Xbox
360
last night at midnight.  The local
news in Seattle
was stationed outside of the

Best Buy I normally go to in Bellevue, giving up-to-the-minute updates about
the progress of the line (several hundred people long) and breathless testimony
about Bill Gates inside "playing games and meeting the Best Buy staff."  I
will say this: it's a frigid night in Seattle (low 40s and foggy) so I hope a
lot of the people who waited actually got a console tonight.

As you might expect, I have friends and acquaintances who have worked on Xbox
360, and I'm happy for them that they finally are starting to reap the rewards
and can kick back and enjoy the upcoming holidays.

As for me, I don't have one yet, but I do plan on getting one eventually. 
Unfortunately, there's no employee discount or purchase program or anything like
that.  In fact, the launch mail sent to everyone at Microsoft tonight
implored us to "make plans to visit retailers early, and check back often, to
pick up yours."

The whole Xbox 360 launch got me thinking about fun.  I'm a big believer
that software can be fun to use--even a piece of productivity software like
Microsoft Office.  But maybe that just cements my status as a hopeless
geek.

Microsoft isn't one of those companies which focus groups itself to death (at
least not in the Office group.)  But, from time to time, our product
planning and marketing teams do lead focus group-type discussions to gauge the
impact of certain marketing messages and to get a sense for how to talk about
the product.

The first of these around the UI happened over a year ago now, in several
major cities.  Marketing showed some mockups of the UI along with a
voiceover explaining a little bit about how it would work.  Then, the
people were asked to evaluate several different possible ways of communicating
the new UI.  They were also given a list of words such as "innovative, fun,
disorienting, bleak, optimistic, useful" and asked to rate on a 1 to 10 scale
how closely the adjective fit the software prototype.

One of the words that people had a fairly negative reaction to was "fun." 
I seem to recall that we had a statement like "The new user interface makes
working with Office more fun."  While some people did agree with the
statement, many people did not and revealed why in ad hoc comments: "Fun is
playing with my kids, not sitting in front of the computer!"  "I go to work
to WORK, not to have FUN.  WORK is not FUN."

So maybe it's beyond the reach of software to be fun for non-geeks.  Or,
maybe the definition of "fun" needs to be a bit more liberal when describing the
experience of using something we ourselves call "productivity software."

What I do think software can aspire to is to try to inspire a sense of
possibility.  A sense that suddenly you're an expert at something than
formerly seemed beyond your grasp.

Yesterday I mentioned that I thought Live Preview was fun.  Well, in a
way I think it is.  Because the the combination of galleries, the Ribbon,
and Live Preview, and I can see 25 great ways for my chart to look in about 10
seconds.  I'm not an expert, but I feel like one.

The software is making me look smart.  It's giving my ego a boost and
making me feel like I know what I'm doing.  I feel in control, and I want
to explore more of the galleries to see what else I can do with a single click.

That to me is "fun."  I kind of know what I'm doing, the software is
responding to me, making me look good, and inspiring in me that sense of
possibility.  I'm inspired to create better things.  Maybe it's not
fun like "whee, we're going to Cedar
Point
to ride
Millennium Force"

, but it's not a bad feeling either.

Is Office 12 all the way there?  Of course not.  But I think we've
at least taken the hard first step at orienting the software towards positive,
enabling experiences that make people look good at what they do.  This is a
goal we should strive for every version.

Is using Office 12 anything like the Xbox 360 kind of fun?  Nah,
probably not.  But if it was, your company probably wouldn't put it on your
PC at work...