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Goodwalk Marketing Voice

A practical guide for writing site copy that sells without sounding like it's selling.

The voice in one line

A trusted neighbour who happens to be brilliant at this. Calm, certain, warm, specific. Not corporate. Not chirpy. Not over-promising.

What we're borrowing from Apple

Apple's marketing works because it does three things ruthlessly:

  1. Leads with the outcome, not the process. "A thousand songs in your pocket" — not "5GB of solid-state storage."
  2. Makes the decision feel small. Confident, declarative sentences. No hedging.
  3. Cuts every word the meaning doesn't need. Short. Then one longer line for texture. Then short again.

For a service business, the equivalent is selling the evening (calm dog, settled house, no guilt), not the walk (60 minutes, pickup included, group size 48).

Voice attributes

Attribute What it means What it isn't
Calm Even cadence. No exclamation marks. No "amazing!" or "incredible!" Hyped, sales-y
Certain "We do X." Not "We try to X" or "We may be able to X." Arrogant, brash
Warm Real feeling for dogs and owners. "Your dog comes home tired and happy." Saccharine, cutesy ("fur babies", "pawsome")
Specific Names suburbs, parks, times. Numbers when they help. Vague ("various", "a wide range", "we offer")
Honest If a service isn't right for a dog, we say so. False scarcity, manipulative urgency

Principles

1. Lead with the customer's win, not your feature

Open every section with what the owner gets or what the dog feels. The mechanism comes second.

"Tiny Gang Pack Walks are built for Auckland Central owners of small and medium dogs who want a reliable weekly routine."

"Your dog comes home tired and happy. You stop worrying through the workday. That's the whole point."

2. Cut every hedge

Search-and-destroy these words: can, may, might, try to, more, genuinely, properly, generally, often, typically, possibly. Each one quietly weakens the sentence.

"Walks tailored to your dog's pace, confidence, and routine."

"Built around your dog. Their pace. Their walk."

3. Short. Then long. Then short.

Vary the rhythm. A wall of medium-length sentences is the most boring possible cadence.

"Goodwalk Tiny Gang Pack Walks are built for Auckland Central owners of small and medium dogs who want a reliable weekly routine, a well-exercised dog, and more peace of mind during the workday."

"A walk your dog looks forward to. A routine you don't have to manage. Pickup, walk, drop-off, photo update — every time, without you having to ask."

4. Active voice, present tense

Things happen. We do them. Your dog enjoys them. Avoid "are designed to" / "is intended for" / "can be tailored."

"Our visits are intended to provide enrichment and support during the day."

"We visit. We play. We feed. You get a photo when we leave."

5. Replace abstract nouns with concrete verbs

"Provide structure" → "settles them." "Build confidence" → "they stop pulling on the lead." "Ensure consistency" → "same walker, every time."

6. Specifics build trust faster than adjectives

"A well-loved local park" tells me nothing. "Western Springs at 9:15, Cornwall Park on Wednesdays" tells me you're real.

7. Sell the relief

Owners aren't buying a walk. They're buying: a quieter evening, a guilt-free workday, one fewer thing to manage. Name those.

8. One idea per sentence

If you wrote a comma, ask whether it should be a full stop.

Patterns we use

Headlines

Two flavours, used purposefully:

  • Outcome line: "Come home to a calm, happy dog."
  • Definitional line: "Pack walks for small dogs that actually suit small dogs."

Avoid: "Welcome to Goodwalk." / "About Us." / "Our Services."

Subheads / leads

One sentence. Says what the section delivers, not what it is.

"About our pack walks"

"Four to eight dogs. Same walker every time. Home by mid-afternoon."

Body copy

  • 13 short paragraphs max per section
  • Lead sentence is the most important; treat it like a headline
  • One link or CTA per paragraph, max

CTAs

Action + outcome, never just "Submit" or "Learn more."

Submit Book a free Meet & Greet
Learn more See if Tiny Gang fits your dog
Contact us Talk to Aless
Get started Start with a Meet & Greet

FAQ answers

  • First sentence answers the question completely
  • Second sentence (if any) adds the texture
  • No "Great question!" / "Glad you asked"

Q: How big are the pack walks?

"48 dogs, carefully matched on size and energy. We never run oversized packs — the small group size is the whole point."

Words and phrases

Use

  • You / your dog — far more than "owners" or "clients"
  • We — direct, owned. Not "the team" or "our walkers"
  • Walk, visit, pickup, drop-off — the customer's words
  • Tiny Gang — our signature, use sparingly so it stays distinct
  • Auckland Central — anchors local intent
  • Concrete park names, suburb names, times

Avoid

  • "Solutions" — never. We're not enterprise software.
  • "Services" as a noun in body copy — too distant. Name the thing.
  • "Pet parents" / "fur babies" / "pup parents" — twee
  • "Pawsome" / "pawfect" / any pun — never
  • "We are passionate about" — show, don't tell
  • "Industry-leading" / "best in class" / "premium" — empty
  • "Reach out" — say "email" or "text" or "call"
  • Exclamation marks in headlines or body copy

Sentence length budget

  • Headlines: ≤ 8 words
  • Subheads: ≤ 14 words
  • Body sentences: average 1216 words, max ~24
  • First sentence of any section: ≤ 12 words

If you wrote a 30-word sentence, it's two sentences.

Before / after, from the live site

Hero subtitle (homepage)

"Reliable dog walking for busy Auckland owners who want happier dogs, calmer evenings, and a team they can trust."

"Reliable dog walking across Auckland Central. Happier dogs. Quieter evenings."

Pack walks intro paragraph

"Goodwalk Tiny Gang Pack Walks are built for Auckland Central owners of small and medium dogs who want a reliable weekly routine, a well-exercised dog, and more peace of mind during the workday."

"Tiny Gang is built for small and medium dogs who like the right kind of company. Small groups. Same walker. A real walk, every time."

Puppy visits subtitle

"Toilet breaks, play, feeding, and calm one-on-one attention — at home, while you're out."

"While you're at work, your puppy is fed, played with, and looked after. At home."

Benefits-section intro

"Small, compatible groups give dogs the exercise, confidence, and routine they need without the chaos of oversized pack walks."

"Small groups. Compatible dogs. No chaos. That's why it works."

A 60-second editing pass

Before any new copy ships, run it through this:

  1. Cut 20%. If you can't, cut 10%.
  2. First sentence test. Could it be a headline? If not, rewrite.
  3. Hedge sweep. Delete every can/may/might/try to/generally/typically and re-read. Most are improvements.
  4. Active voice check. Search for "is/are [verb-ed] by" or "is intended to" and rewrite.
  5. Specific vs vague. Replace one vague phrase per paragraph with a real name, number, or detail.
  6. Read it aloud. If you take a breath mid-sentence, it's too long.

When to break these rules

  • Legal pages, contracts, privacy. Be precise and complete, not punchy.
  • Onboarding instructions. Clarity > rhythm.
  • Genuine warmth moments. A short, slightly longer line about a dog or a moment is allowed — it's the texture. Just don't make it the default.