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Co-founder, THE DEN. Leader of an #IRLrevolution, fighting to give every UK teenager somewhere to socialise IRL | Ex-CEO, CMO | Executive coach | Advisor | Consultant |

Linkedin is a place full of people who spend their lives seeking to 'understand their audience'. But what happens when you are no-one's audience? What happens when you aren't a valuable consumer, valuable voter, valuable donor or funder? The next generation are no-one's audience today. They are everyone's audience in the future. But, in times of increasing short-termism, increasing financial pressure, we all know today takes precedence over tomorrow. Short beats long. So what happens if you are no-one's audience today? No-one seeks to understand you. No-one seeks to create the things that meet your needs. You aren't a solution for next quarter's growth deficit, profit gap or opinion poll disaster. So you are disregarded, ignored, and quite frankly royally shafted by 'the market' 'government' and 'society'. You don't matter. If you are no-one's audience today, then no-one is thinking about, or fighting to create what you need. I don't know what our teenagers can do to make their voice any louder, but I'm damn sure we need to start listening to their cries. Add your voice now to make theirs louder. www.irlrevolution.co.uk #IRLrevolution ##teenmentalhealth #youtheconomy #startup #entrepreneurship https://lnkd.in/esR_9MV7

Teenagers ‘crying out’ for return of youth clubs in England, study finds

Teenagers ‘crying out’ for return of youth clubs in England, study finds

theguardian.com

John Featherby

Building 'Good' Businesses

2mo

I agree more is needed. As an additional comment to that, though, pretty much every modern church in every town in the country has a youth club of some sorts: that is by no means a small number of youth clubs. And they are all seeking the next generation in terms of providing an escape, wellbeing, community belonging, fun etc. There is more to the story than I would say the guardian article portrays. Some might not want to encourage teenagers into church run youth groups but there would be an irony in that if we write them off given the very culture of UK youth clubs we might be nostalgic for - eg the YMCA - grew out of church communities. Equally, whether we think it is the state's job to provide this or the community's. But in terms of a national infrastructure - volunteers, safeguarding, buildings, an organisation behind it etc - there is plenty already to work with. If there is a lack of something, it is often adult support. There are three or four groups in my town and they are all full, I think; in the sense that they probably can't take many more children without more adult volunteers because of the number ratios. I led one for a while (c50 children/week) and it was one of the most rewarding things I've done.

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