I was in a strategy session yesterday, getting cheerfully interrogated about positioning, when I heard myself tell a story I hadn’t reached for in years. A man named Johnny Earle opened two bakeries. No cupcakes. You walk in, the air is warm and smells like vanilla and sugar, you pull open an oven, and inside there are t-shirts. He calls them fakeries. People came in for cake. They left with a shirt and a story they could not stop telling at parties.
The safe read on this is “be quirky, be memorable.” You should ignore that read. It is the read that takes a strange, useful idea and flattens it into a fridge magnet.
The shirts did not sell because the shop was cute. They sold because of the half-second of vertigo between expecting cake and getting cotton. That little gap, that small honest betrayal of what you promised, is the actual product. The shirt is just the thing you carry the feeling out in.
The gap has a name nobody likes to say out loud in a pitch meeting. Tension.
We have spent a decade training the tension out of our work and calling it craft. Smooth onboarding. Frictionless checkout. A homepage so balanced it reads like a hostage statement. And it works, in the sense that nothing breaks and nobody complains.
It also fails, in the sense that nobody remembers you the next morning. Comfort is what people say they want. Friction is what they actually buy, because friction is the only thing that leaves a mark, and memory is just the catalog of marks.
I watched this play out in real numbers this year. The companies pulling away in crowded categories were not the ones with the cleanest value prop. They were the ones whose salespeople opened with some version of “here’s what I think you’re getting wrong,” and only then, once there was a little heat in the room, got around to what they sell.
A CMO I trust told me the thing she loves most in a meeting is being challenged, because at least then something is at stake. Everyone else was sending her case studies. She was deleting them on her walk from her office to the kitchen.
Here is the inconvenient part… Tension cannot be A/B tested into existence.
You can optimize a button color. You cannot optimize courage.
A test will always, given enough rounds, walk you toward the blandest option that nobody hated, because “nobody hated it” is exactly what an average is good at finding.
Tension requires a human being willing to leave a bruise on the page and defend it on Monday. It is a decision, not a result.
I know this because I got caught not doing it.
In that same session I admitted, out loud, that I did not recognize the headline on one of my own landing pages. We had wired up a slick little loop that kept rewriting the copy toward whatever read cleanest, and it did its job beautifully. Every pass sanded a hair more grip off the sentence. Correct, then polished, then smooth, then gone. I had automated a brand voice into a pleasant hum I could no longer pick out of a lineup. The machine was not malfunctioning. Smoothness is its native gravity. Anything left running long enough without a thumb on the scale drifts toward the absence of friction, because friction is the one thing it cannot generate and does not miss.
That is the quiet danger in all of this, and it has very little to do with robots.
The safest sentence in your marketing is usually the one doing the most damage, precisely because it is too agreeable to argue with. It survives every review. It offends no committee. It dies on contact with a real human’s attention and nobody attends the funeral.
We’d be better off building more sentences (ovens?) without the cake.
Stay Positive & “Smooth” Is Simply Slow Disappearance
