tagline-creation-strategies

Tagline Creation Strategies

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Tagline Creation Strategies

Quick reference for creating memorable, strategic taglines using proven methodologies from expert copywriters and brand strategists.

"Your brand isn't what you say it is. It's what they say it is." — Marty Neumeier

Key Distinction: Trueline vs Tagline

Type Purpose Audience Example (Nike)

Trueline Internal compass that guides decisions Internal team "Helps you find your inner athlete"

Tagline Public-facing "sexy" formulation Customers "Just Do It"

How They Work Together:

  • Start with the trueline to nail positioning

  • Craft the tagline as its public expression

  • The trueline informs; the tagline performs

The 7-Step Professional Process

  • Internal Brand Audit: Collect brand assets, attributes, benefits, differentiators

  • Competitive Analysis: Review competitors' taglines for differentiation opportunities

  • Audience Research: Understand needs, wants, challenges, aspirations

  • Extensive Brainstorming: Generate 100+ options (where the magic happens)

  • Distillation: Write USP fully → cut by half 3x → apply linguistic device

  • Evaluation & Shortlist: Whittle to 5-7 candidates with objective feedback

  • Testing & Vetting: A/B test, check trademark conflicts, test across mediums

"If there is magic in the tagline creation process, brainstorming is where it happens."

The Distillation Method

The most practical technique for creating taglines:

  • Write your USP in as many words as necessary

  • Cut the word count in half (first pass)

  • Cut it in half again (second pass)

  • Cut it in half a third time (third pass)

  • Apply a linguistic device (rhyme, alliteration, parallelism)

Tagline Types

Type Description Example

Descriptive Describes offering, benefits, or promise "Save money. Live better." (Walmart)

Emotional Appeals to feelings "Because You're Worth It" (L'Oreal)

Aspirational Inspires achievement "Impossible is nothing" (Adidas)

Imperative Call to action "Just Do It" (Nike)

Superlative Positions as the best "The Best a Man Can Get" (Gillette)

Interrogative Uses a question "Got Milk?"

Provocative Thought-provoking "Think Different" (Apple)

Expert Recommendation: "To hit emotional triggers, prioritize differentiation taglines or results-driven taglines."

Tagline Formulas

Proven structural patterns:

Formula Example

[Verb] + [Noun] "Think Different"

[Action] + [Benefit] "Eat Fresh"

[Empowering Word] + [X] "Rethink [X]", "Imagine [X]"

[Number] + [Benefit] For specific claims

"The [Only/Best] [X] that [Y]" Superlative positioning

Question Format "What's in your wallet?"

Linguistic Devices for Memorability

These devices have roots in oral tradition—they helped memorize stories across generations:

Device Example Why It Works

Rhyme "The quicker picker-upper" (Bounty) Phonetic patterns are easier to encode

Alliteration "The best a man can get" (Gillette) Repeated sounds create rhythm

Parallelism "Go green, Go Ford" Structural patterns aid recall

Sensory Language "Finger lickin' good" (KFC) Activates more brain areas

Rhythm "Just Do It" (Nike) The brain is "a sucker for rhythm"

Psychology of Memorability

Key Statistics

  • Most liked slogans: 4.9 words average

  • Most recalled slogans: 3.9 words average

  • Tourism slogans: 3.64 words average

  • Optimal tagline length: 2-7 words (never more than 7-8)

The Likability vs. Memorability Trade-off

"Easily liked slogans are often forgettable. Memorable slogans challenge the audience with uncommon words, concrete imagery, or complexity. To remember something, we must think about it."

Find the sweet spot: memorable enough to stick, likable enough to resonate.

Emotional Triggers

Trigger Example Mechanism

Identity Alignment "Think Different" (Apple) Appeals to who people ARE or aspire to be

Aspiration "Just Do It" (Nike) Connects with motivation and empowerment

Self-Worth "Because You're Worth It" (L'Oreal) Taps into desire for validation

Sensory Experience "The Ultimate Driving Machine" (BMW) Promises physical/emotional exhilaration

Famous Tagline Lessons

Nike: "Just Do It" (1988)

Created by: Dan Wieden (night before client presentation) Initial reception: "We don't need that shit" — Wieden insisted: "Just trust me on this one" Lesson: Great taglines often face initial resistance. Conviction matters.

Apple: "Think Different" (1997)

The quirk: "Think Different" not "Think Differently" — grammatical incorrectness creates distinctiveness Lesson: Emotional positioning can be more powerful than feature-dense messaging.

L'Oreal: "Because You're Worth It" (1971)

The innovation: Among the FIRST taglines to focus on women's self-worth Lesson: Emotional benefits often outweigh functional ones.

BMW: "The Ultimate Driving Machine" (1974)

Results: U.S. sales from 13,000 to over 90,000 in a decade Lesson: "Superlative" taglines can work when backed by genuine product excellence.

Common Mistakes

Mistake Problem Fix

Being Too Generic "Quality you can trust" — could be any brand Use the Onlyness Test

Using Clichés/Jargon Technical terms aren't common language Use everyday words

Neglecting Customer Benefits Features without "so what?" Focus on what's in it for THEM

Overcomplicating Too many words, too many ideas Distillation Method: cut by half 3x

Being Overly Clever People remember the wit, forget the brand "Rather than clever, be direct and clear"

Copying Others Confuses customers, risks legal trouble Onlyness Test

Cultural/Translation Failures Pepsi's "Brings you back to life" → "Brings ancestors from grave" in Chinese Test internationally

Disconnection from Brand Tagline doesn't match actual experience Align with trueline

Ignoring Medium Constraints Works on billboard, not on business card Test across contexts

Not Testing Launching with untested assumptions A/B test, focus groups

Including Brand Name Research shows it feels "too sales-y" Keep tagline separate

Testing Frameworks

AIDA Evaluation

Test whether your tagline achieves:

  • Attention: Does it grab attention?

  • Interest: Does it sustain interest?

  • Desire: Does it create desire?

  • Action: Does it prompt action?

ABC Test

Is your tagline:

  • Authentic: True to your brand

  • Believable: Credible, not overpromising

  • Customer-Oriented: Focused on their benefit

Key Metrics to Evaluate

Metric Question

Memorability Can people recall it after seeing once?

Clarity Do they understand what it means?

Emotional Response What feelings does it evoke?

Brand Fit Does it align with brand identity?

Differentiation Does it stand out from competitors?

The Onlyness Test

Can you complete this sentence in a way no competitor can?

"Our [OFFERING] is the only [CATEGORY] that [BENEFIT]."

If a competitor's name could substitute and the statement still works, your positioning needs work.

Expert Frameworks

Eugene Schwartz's 5 Levels of Awareness

Tailor your tagline approach based on where your audience is:

Level Description Tagline Approach

Most Aware Knows product, ready to buy Direct, product-focused

Product-Aware Knows product, not convinced Benefit-focused

Solution-Aware Knows solutions exist, not yours Differentiation-focused

Problem-Aware Has problem, doesn't know solutions Problem-agitation then solution

Completely Unaware Doesn't recognize the problem Start with identity or aspiration

David Ogilvy's 8 Headline Principles

  • Headlines should be complete advertisements

  • Include the brand name (debated—see modern research)

  • Avoid tricky headlines (no puns or literary allusions)

  • Be clear and direct (everyday language)

  • Use specific numbers ("5%" beats "less than you might suppose")

  • Optimal length: 6-12 words for headlines, 2-7 for taglines

  • Avoid negative words (readers may skip the "not")

  • News headlines work best (announce something new)

Scott Bedbury's Brand Mantra Framework

A three-word internal sentence that captures brand meaning:

Structure: [Emotional Modifier] + [Descriptive Modifier] + [Brand Function]

Examples:

  • Nike: "Authentic Athletic Performance"

  • Disney: "Fun Family Entertainment"

A brand mantra is NOT a tagline—it's an internal compass that guides decisions. But it can inspire tagline direction.

Key Principles

  • "Your brand isn't what you say it is. It's what they say it is." — Marty Neumeier

  • Headlines/taglines should telegraph what you want to say — David Ogilvy

  • "If you confuse, you'll lose." — Donald Miller

  • "Copy cannot create desire — it can only channel existing desire." — Eugene Schwartz

  • Shorter is almost always better: Aim for 2-4 words, never more than 7-8

  • The most recalled taglines average 3.9 words — Research finding

  • Emotional impact matters more than word count

  • Clarity beats cleverness every time

  • Position first, tagline second — Get positioning right before crafting

  • "You can't advertise your way to onlyness — you have to start with it." — Marty Neumeier

Templates

See reference/templates.md for:

  • Tagline Document Template

  • Strategic Foundation Template

  • Tagline Option Template

  • Evaluation Matrix Template

  • Anti-Pattern Check Template

  • Usage Guidelines Template

  • Testing Protocol Template

  • Quick Reference Card Template

  • Output Validation Checklist

When to Apply This Knowledge

During Tagline Development

  • Complete positioning work first (April Dunford's 5 components)

  • Write the Onlyness Statement and Brand Mantra

  • Generate 100+ options using brainstorming techniques

  • Apply the Distillation Method

  • Use linguistic devices for memorability

During Evaluation

  • Apply AIDA and ABC tests

  • Check against Common Mistakes list

  • Run the Onlyness Test

  • Score candidates on evaluation matrix

During Finalization

  • Test with target audience (A/B, surveys)

  • Check trademark availability

  • Test across mediums (billboard, business card, digital)

  • Create usage guidelines

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