Monday, November 4, 2013

More Haiku for you: What every Kamikaze Copywriter needs for inspiration, lessons in writing visually

More on why Haiku are so good for learning to write copy

As with my post of 1/13/13, What Japanese Poets know about Kamikaze Copywriting, I appreciate both the freedom – and strict limitations – of traditional Japanese Haiku.  Growing up in Japan, the form was all around me.  At best, I spoke/read pigeon Japanese, but mine was a family of readers and in keeping with our surroundings my parents often shared these amazing little poems with me. 

I think what I love most – and learned best – from this early (ongoing, really – I still read them for inspiration, in admiration of their form) exposure was how visual words can be without using descriptors.  When I write on a student’s paper “be more visual!” I don’t mean add a string of modifiers.  I mean put me (and your prospect) in the word picture you’re painting.
  
Writing visually is more about the experience than the description.  Visual writing is active, engaging.  Does this mean “I watched little Sally’s chubby legs run in ever-widening circles around the riot of blues, pinks and yellows that is her granny’s old English garden?”  Absolutely not.  Visual writing is active, puts the reader into the picture.  It isn’t about an experience.  It is the experience.  It isn't about the product, it is the product.

I often tell students “don’t write about the product, put the product – and the prospect – in active, sparsely worded perspective."  Product as hero.  Here are a few clues:

Action verbs, not passive verbs

Make the reader see what you’re saying, not hear it in their heads.  This means there’s also an engaging emotional component to your words and structure.

Don’t add more words, enrich the words you already have.

Visual writing is about the depth, quality¸ rhythm of words, how they fit into the line’s structure.  Playing with structure itself can add a visual sense.  Here’s a line I often use when defining Translate the Thought:  I know why birds fly (the thought it translates, I hate sitting in traffic).  The line contains no descriptors, but immediately brings to mind the image/feeling of birds flying freely and how I wish I could do the same.  In my mind, I see geese in chevron flight.  A friend of mine sees hawks circling.  My husband wonders if the canary got out of his cage.

My point is, the action the birds take – flying – gives the mental picture I can see myself in.  The knowingness speaks to how I feel about it.  It’s visual writing, sans descriptors.

I've given the assignment of writing advertising Haiku before (see post captioned above).  It’s always a big hit, although I am often perplexed by the difficulties students have with the 5-7-5 and using words that aren’t weak verbs, meaningless fillers (see Kamikaze Copy Sins). This assignment is going to be a bit different from the one I usually give.

This week’s assignment is to write three advertising Haiku.  How do ad Haiku differ from traditional?
 
  • You must use the 5-7-5 syllable pattern, write visually and include a strong kiru (twist).  The language/tone/voice however, must speak to your prospect.  Thinking of the first two lines as posing a problem, the third, final line as its answer may help you get your head around the assignment, kiru, etc.
  • You must include at least one feature/benefit (see blog post 8/27/12, Features, Benefits and the Language of Concept) in each Haiku.
  • Each Haiku must be written to one of these prospect/product combos.  You must do three different product/prospect combos, not three Haiku to the same one:
    • Safety message – teens texting while driving
    • Sweet potatoes (category) – seniors
    •  All natural, organic dog food (choose a brand) – dog owners
    • Kitty towers (those carpeted climbing perches you see in pet stores) – cat owners
    • Go To Meeting.com – meeting site/software to small business owners
    • Axe Body Spray – Millennial Males (don’t worry about trying to match their current stuff)
    • The Creative Circus – Upcoming college graduates
    • This class – prospective Circus students

That should give you a pretty good field to choose from.  Post your Haiku in the comments section to this entry, bring them to Doreen Live!, we'll discuss them in class and I will take them home w/me (bring two hard copies to class, one for me, one for you) Thursday, 1:30 at the Circus.

Questions?  Reread the assignment email I sent earlier today.  Contact me via the Circus student gmail box.

Have fun.  See you there. 


©2013, Doreen Dvorin/Kamikaze Creative


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9 comments:

  1. The Rational Sweet Potato
    KKF Pills become routine

    body not working
    peel an orange potato
    leave pill box behind


    A Nudist Describes Go To Meeting
    KKF Morning traffic sucks.

    stinking smog floats still
    driving means putting on pants
    meet online instead


    Pizza Face Scores with Axe Body Spray
    KKF Acne is common in teens.

    puss filled pimples blow
    thank god for quick distractions
    sweet scent fills her nose

    ReplyDelete
  2. Newman’s own dog food haiku
    KKF: Grass-fed beef makes better burgers.

    Harmful chemicals
    Brings inner sorrow to friends
    Nature ends the pain

    Safety Message
    KKF: You only live once.

    The story of life
    Another page every day
    Don’t write yours quickly.

    The Creative Circus
    KKF: The world keeps spinning.

    Journey into world
    Preparation is the key
    Remain the standard

    ReplyDelete
  3. Don't Text and Drive
    KKF: Young people are conditioned to multitask.

    Darting back and forth-
    Road, phone, road, phone, road, phone, crash-
    Then closed forever.


    Creative Circus
    KKF: Committing to a creative life is a big gamble.

    What makes us feel sane
    Is trusting ourselves enough
    To leap off the edge.

    Karma Organic Dog Food
    KKF: Dogs deserve to live longer than humans.

    They always show love
    With no language to speak of.
    Return the favor.


    ReplyDelete
  4. Orange lump of health
    Invisible vitamins
    Fill my weary bones



    Custom leather couch
    Threatened by claws of fury
    Scratcher sleeping sound



    Burning rubber fumes
    Twisted metallic coffin
    “J K. Be there soon.”

    ReplyDelete
  5. Kitty Towers

    Monument for them
    Old Egyptian royalty
    A deserved tower


    Axe Body Spray

    A magnet in life
    Does not offended the senses
    They will seek you out



    Doreen’s Class

    Journey started now
    No turning back, frightening
    Pen improves paper

    ReplyDelete
  6. Caitlin Brett

    Kitty Towers
    Promise:
    Your cat will be happier and more affectionate towards you if you get her a perch.
    KKF:
    Indoor cats like to stare out windows and imagine that they are big, wild hunting cats.

    A bird rests nearby.
    My claws extend. I lunge, yet
    The window stops me.


    GoToMeeting.com
    Promise:
    Bringing your remote workers into the fold will make all of your employees more productive.
    KKF:
    Facial expressions are an important key to unlocking all the nuance of a conversation.

    Coffee in hand, you
    Open your laptop and see
    A warm, smiling face.


    Teens Texting
    Promise:
    Texting while driving increases your risk of being in a car accident.
    KKF:
    Teens are often the first to know about cool new apps and Internet trends.

    This stretch of drive is
    Perfect for checking Facebook.
    Post your last status.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mary Claire Melton, Q4, November 7, 2013

    Most people are more concerned about getting pulled over, than the danger of texting and driving.

    Texting and Driving:

    Gut-wrenching blue lights
    are favored to your two cents,
    becoming your last.

    What you eat affects how you behave.

    Organix Dog Food:

    The afternoon meal
    affect, drains energy, but
    not in this backyard.

    College graduates are often in limbo between knowing what they want, and what they think they should be doing.

    Creative Circus:
    Possibility
    creates too many doors, to
    ignore one you want.


    ReplyDelete
  8. Kitty Towers

    Newly broken blinds
    Cat hair on the countertops
    Three levels to climb

    Tripping down the stairs
    Always underfoot, deserves
    Their own space to sleep

    Unraveling strings
    Sad missing buttons, cat takes
    Anything he wants

    Safety Message for Teens

    Missing the gossip
    Not being the first to like
    Ignorance saves lives

    Oh em gee lady
    Did u c th@ giant rek
    It cud b ur fate

    Being a hero
    Save a life, maybe your own
    Put the phone down, dude

    Creative Circus

    Art for money, please
    I’m not good at other things
    Everything fits here

    Endless days, short nights
    We even sell pet rocks
    Live your passion here

    Product brings challenges
    Arguments over type face
    Birds are in this year

    Different rules here
    No right answer, try to fail
    Open minds and worlds

    ReplyDelete
  9. Texting While Driving

    Your friends can't forget
    You never got to say goodbye
    Last words Dot Dot Dot



    GoToMeeting.com

    With staff of just four
    Long days only get longer
    Always wait on Sam


    Axe Body Spray

    Catching her blue eyes
    Made easy when she's given
    Reason to look back

    ReplyDelete