You know what?
Being a copywriter comes with some pretty interesting baggage.
Itโs not something you choose reallyโฆ it chooses you.
I for one have this talent, this tendency, proclivity evenโฆ
One thatโs awesome for my clients, and not always easy for me (or the people in my life)
Basically, being able to perceive peopleโs REAL motivations.
Right through ALL of that veneer, learned behaviours, mimicry, politeness and on and on.
In an instant. Clear as a whistle. GOT it.
โI see youโ as they say in those funky blue Avatar movies.
Itโs great when I get to employ that in a professional setting.
Say, thereโs someone coming to me with a fitness product they want me to sell.
In an instant, I know their customers are NOT looking for a fitness plan or a personal trainer.
I SEE their pain; how they once got a stinging poolside comment about their flabby belly within earshot of their wife and how it secretly ruined his entire vacation and he NEVER wants to feel like that again, no matter what.
Okay. Easy. Then I just go about awakening that pain in an empathetic way, and gently lead the prospect towards the obvious solution my client just happens to be selling.
Oversimplification, yes. But thatโs essentially what happens inside of me that nobody sees.
Whatโs less fun is I cannot really turn it off in the rest my life. Not without considerable effort.
So I end up in a meeting room with a smiling courteous fella, whose word everyone in the room hangs on.
And he says he wants to work with me, all sweet and nice.
But in that same INSTANT, I can see through all of it and see their real, raw, well disguised motivation just happens to be a complete opposite of their well rehearsed words. Theyโre in it for โthe bagโ and personal legacy; Iโm clearly in the way.
So this is when it gets tricky; do I go along with whatโs being spoken out loud?
Or do I trust my well-honed gut, knowing Iโll bear the brunt of the rest of the roomโs disagreement?
Do I dare be the naysayer at the expense of that social lubrication called acceptance?
Too often in my past, Iโve just gone along and silenced that clear voice in my head. Maybe I was just daydreaming, what the hell, letโs power through it.
And yet, 99% of the time, my gut was proven right as time goes on.
Regardless of any โbelief in peopleโ I may have applied to the situation.
(A remnant of my Nokia days by the way, warrants another writeup another timeโฆ)
Thankfully, this ability goes the other way too.
Which is to say, I sometimes find the diamond in the rough.
A person whoโs been pushed by the wayside, all they need is the right push from someone who believes in them. How about that, in a few moments theyโre back on their feet and doing well.
A product a client has forgotten all about that I clearly see should get the full launch treatment. And how about that, a hit product was born that bears fruit for years to come.
Whatโs funny isโฆ this ability to โSEE throughโ is maybe 80% inborn, and 20% practice.
As a result, itโs been super hard to pass on to junior copywriters and such. And Iโve almost given up trying to do so.
Of course Iโm not alone in being like this. Thereโs some copywriters who Iโm told are similar, such as Brian Keith Voiles (never knew him but his reputation preceded him).
Every now and then I get the prodding to attempt to put it all in writing, a book, something more tangible than a coffee table conversation.
Maybe itโs possible to convey in some way? I donโt really know.
But I like the thought of there being more people with some version of this โx-rayโ vision into the human condition.
Maybe together we can achieve a lot – yes in the service of business, but also to pierce the veil of illusion thatโs been getting thicker and thicker in recent years.
โI see youโ. See you around?
PS. As you may or may not know, us Finns are notoriously reluctant to talk themselves up in ANY way at all. โIf youโre good at anything or experience any happiness, keep it to yourselfโ.ย So consider this a major departure from my ancestral roots, hahaโฆ #moretocome.

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