Two posts make the same point. One says most outbound fails because the targeting is lazy. The other says we sent 4,000 emails to a list nobody had touched in a year and booked one meeting, with a man who wrote back asking us to stop. Same lesson. Only one of them gets read.
Abstraction is the enemy of attention
A general claim asks the reader to picture it themselves. Most won't. They have seen a hundred posts about lazy targeting and they already know how this one ends. The specific version hands them the picture fully developed. The 4,000. The one meeting. The man who asked you to stop. There is nothing to skim, because every line carries something the reader did not already have.
The detail you want to cut is the one to keep
Writers trim the specifics because they feel small, or risky, or off-topic. The real name. The exact number. The thing the client actually said. That instinct is backwards. The small detail is the proof you were there. Cut it and the post could have been written by anyone about anything. Keep it and only you could have written it.
- Name the real number, even when a round one reads cleaner. 4,000 lands; thousands evaporates.
- Quote what was actually said. A real sentence beats your tidy paraphrase of it.
- Pick the one detail that could not have been invented. That is the one doing the work.
Specific is not the same as long
This is not a license to add. The specific post is usually shorter, because one concrete detail replaces three sentences of throat-clearing that were standing in for it. You are not writing more. You are writing the one thing that was true and cutting everything that was filler around it.
How we keep it honest in buyWords
The writing engine is built to reach for the specific, and forbidden from inventing it. When a post would be stronger with a number it does not have, it ships a placeholder for you to fill, never a figure it made up. The specific detail only works because it is real. The moment it is fabricated, it becomes the fastest way on the platform to lose the room.