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Copywriting's Great Pun Debate: Punderful or Punfortunate?

12/10/2023
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Some of the industry's leading copywriters and linguistic pundamentalists provide some punditry on one of adland's evergreen arguments, writes 天美棋牌's Ben Conway


To pun or not to pun? That is the question that we've put forward to some of the industry鈥檚 copywriting experts. 

A seemingly never-ending debate full of impassioned viewpoints from both sides, this particular branch of wordplay walks a precarious line between clever and cringe. At best, a punny twist of linguistic genius can give a campaign the creativity and memorability it desperately needs. At worst... well, it doesn't bear thinking about. The forced, nonsensical and unnecessary pun can elicit a groan that lasts millennia, and a visceral eye-roll capable of blinding even the most stoic among us.

To discuss the art of striking this balance, and share their unique punderstanding of this technique's pros and cons in advertising, copywriting experts from across the world spoke with 天美棋牌's Ben Conway. 



Vikki Ross

Brand, TOV and copy consultant


Wordplay. It gives copy a good pun for your money.

Puns make less mean much, much more. They make copy quick. Slick. Stick them in slogans to tell a long story in a short line, like by Lucky Generals. It's first-class copywriting. A brand purpose, a product benefit and a call to action all neatly packed into just four words. Words that work. 

It鈥檚 not easy to go in all puns blazing. Hell, it鈥檚 not always intentional. Playing with words isn鈥檛 in the brief but is in the process. And when all is said and pun, we鈥檝e made a message more meaningful and memorable. Write? 

Please handle puns responsibly:

  • Don鈥檛 go off brand.
  • Don鈥檛 use them if they鈥檙e meaningless.
  • Don鈥檛 let them get lost in translation. 

Some of my favourite examples of puns in advertising are from: , Apple, , , American Airlines,  and Nike.




Owen Lee

Chief creative officer, 


鈥楶uns are fun鈥 a friend of mine who I went to ad school with used to say. And he even used to change boring poster ads near our college into funny puns in the dead of night with the use of the college photocopier. He has since gone on to write some iconic advertising for some of Britain鈥檚 best-loved brands (none of it puns by the way), so he shall remain nameless.

Puns are indeed fun. Ask anyone who doesn鈥檛 work in advertising to come up with an idea for a brand and they tend to have a hilarious time coming up with more and more elaborate puns. That鈥檚 because we鈥檝e all grown up with 鈥榞roaners鈥, as we used to call them, from local trades calling themselves 'Tree Wise Men', 'Surelock Homes' and 'Mowsart', to

But the problem with puns is that they sound cheap and easy, and people tend to laugh along with the gag rather than remembering what the brand has to say.

I grew up in an industry where puns, exclamation marks and jingles were persona non grata in the best advertising circles. But then, relatively recently, Just Eat proved us all wrong about jingles and of course, every now and then a pun comes along that鈥檚 too wonderful to ignore. Take Virgin鈥檚 for example. Or my favourite from our Chicago office, which was not only brilliantly memorable and funny, it also won a Gold Effie. So maybe puns aren鈥檛 just fun after all.



Anete Thomas

Copywriter,



In a cluttered world filled with advertising, standing out is key. Among the endless stream of content out there, a fine-tuned pun has the power to break through the noise and grab your attention like a baby's fist.

It's brain candy that can add humour, character, cleverness, and depth to a brand's messaging. They aren't just a dance with words; they're like a mini mental workout, inviting and entertaining perceptive readers.

Puns invite participation, creating a two-way conversation. It doesn't matter what medium you're writing for; puns can help brands sound less commercial, making them memorable, stand out, and leave a lasting impression on consumers.

Remember Where other brands might have chickened out, they came up with something brain-lickin' good.

For copywriters, it's easier said than done: one should think outside the box, play with language, and come up with creative new ways to express ideas, simplifying complexity while maintaining clarity.

There's a thin line, though, where the balance can tip towards the cringe side. Needless to say, brands should avoid this route by all means. That's where the real question lies for us copywriters: how do we write it right without brands getting pun-ished?

In a nutshell, puns can add some flavour and crunch to your brand's messaging. Just don't go nuts with it.



Helen Laird

Copywriter,



As a language and #copysafari enthusiast, I'll admit my appreciation for punslingers. When executed skilfully, puns are a testament to the versatility and richness of language. A well-timed pun, like 'Marks & snitches' from Aldi's Twitter beef, Daft Punk-inspired 'Feta, harder, breakfaster and stronger', romance-ready 'Waitroses' and Tesco's 'Go in all buns glazing' help elevate mundane products and moments into something eye-catching, memorable, and even iconic.

Clever wordsmithing aside, it's crucial to filter any word-wielding with a cultural lens. 'Go in all buns glazing' is a tasty treat for Brits but would inevitably leave American audiences hot, cross and buttered.



In the sociocultural bubble, we've always turned to wordplay and puns such as, 'when life gives you lemons, make lemonade' as powerful communication tools to bring levity in moments of hardship. Looking to the robotic realm of creativity, even the best AI is no match for a clever copywriter... or even an average one. It's a skill that - for now - is uniquely human (phew).

Ultimately, these linguistic acrobatics, in the right context, with the right audience and a dash of creative juice, can delight a circus of audiences - and the best of grumps. However, like stunts, just the right amount in a routine can create a showstopping performance.


Andy Segal

Executive creative director,



Bruce Springsteen once sang, 鈥淏aby, I was born to pun.鈥 His manager forced him to change it. But I never would鈥檝e. I鈥檓 from Polish heritage, where 鈥榩un鈥 means 鈥楳ister.鈥 So yeah, I was literally born to pun. 

Now, to those who say you can鈥檛 pun in ads, let me set things straight for those can鈥檛s. Firstly, puns allow you to swear. In fun ways. Kogan.com鈥檚 brand platform, 鈥榗lickin鈥 awesome鈥 gave the brand a new cheeky attitude. And for our client Superhero, we gave our competition, 'a kick up the ASX'.

And unlike dad jokes, puns go farther. They allow you to breathe life into idioms. And when people recognise a saying, it resonates with them because of familiarity bias. The Economist did this brilliantly with gems like, 'Great Minds Like A Think' and 'E = IQ2'.

And if you still think they鈥檙e pungent, let me mansplain the most punbelievable way to pun. The portmanteau. And chillax, it classifies as a pun, I checked Wikipedia. 

When you鈥檝e got a pun in your holster, it can be a weapon. Just please, don鈥檛 be trigger happy, or it could hurt your reputation. One bad headline can be a life sentence.



Brian L. Perkins

Director/creative director,



Look: in the real world, puns are the worst. A stand-up comedian who made puns an integral part of the act would get booed off stage immediately. People who bust puns out socially often get outright booed to their face. And rightly so. Puns are forced, desperate, and outdated. They make people uncomfortable. Puns have no place in modern society鈥 except in advertising.

Why? Because 95% of advertising is filled with impossible-to-care-about jargon and narcissistic, overpromising humblebrags. In this desert of meaningless brandspeak, puns are an oasis of humanity. Their dorky lameness reads as relatable humility. And just as importantly: they鈥檙e punchy. They don鈥檛 waste my time. As a human and consumer, I鈥檇 much rather hear quick, lame jokes from a nerdy try-hard than lengthy odes to brand pillars and product features from an arrogant marketing team drowning in its own Kool-Aid.

So, if you tell me your product is 'wincredible' in person, I鈥檒l make careful note to avoid talking to you in the future. But tell it to me in an ad and I鈥檒l think, 'Nice. At least they didn鈥檛 tell me about their bold and authentic cloud-based sales lead automation for enterprise with real-time, no-code mobile management capabilities'.



Jody Bufkin

Senior copywriter,


Puns are like cilantro. They鈥檙e fresh, tangy, and some people absolutely abhor them. And like cilantro, a dash of punditry can elevate the flavour profile of your copy - but too much, and you鈥檙e dining on dad jokes. So, it鈥檚 important you stick to the Pundamentals.

  • First thought, best thought. You鈥檒l never get back the time you wasted working on a pun. So, disregard your gut, just write it down and get back to the real work - not writing puns. How much thought do you think went into 'Happy Honda Days'?
  • Some puns work. Most puns don鈥檛. Like dogs, puns are bad at most jobs, but there are a few jobs that puns excel at - like taglines. Just look at The Dollar Shave Club鈥檚 tag: 'Shave time. Shave money'.
  • Be more funny than punny. A good pun is a bad pun because it鈥檚 too clever, and a bad pun is the best pun because it鈥檚 just so hilariously bad. So, when you鈥檙e expecting haha鈥檚, but get ah鈥檚, it means the copy is overpun.

So, that鈥檚 the pundown on puns. Don鈥檛 be afraid to sprinkle some puns over your copy, but make sure your audience has a taste for it first.



Lee Tan

Founding partner,


If you ask people who don鈥檛 work in our industry to write an ad, from nine years old to 90, chances are they鈥檒l come up with a horrendous pun. Which is quite odd considering most budding creatives are weaned off the dreaded pun before they鈥檙e out of their copywriting onesies. 

But the fact most people reach straight for their pun pencil suggests that, when it comes to advertising, puns are what they remember. And making memories is what our industry is all about. So puns are powerful. But with great power comes great responsibility. It鈥檚 almost too easy to write a bad pun. Just ask that nine or 90 year old. But a great pun is like gold dust.

A poster telling us 鈥楲abour Isn鈥檛 Working鈥 tapped into a nation鈥檚 mood and toppled a government. A campaign telling us to probably landed a retail shipping message better than any other idea could have. 鈥楧rink Responsibly鈥 was such a great pun waiting to happen, someone had to go make a beer called 鈥楻esponsibly鈥. was such an ownable pun, it seared a price comparison site into our brains even though it didn鈥檛 make any sense.

So I鈥檓 for any technique that makes lasting memories. So by all means, do pun. But just make sure it鈥檚 a bloody good one.



Curro Piqueras

Executive creative director,


A barber shop called 'Barber Streisand', a bar called 'Tequila Mockingbird', or a plumbing company called 'Flush Gordon'. Puns are everywhere, so why is it so hard to find them in good advertising? Maybe one of the reasons is that it feels too accessible, too easy. If the rest of the mortals do it, why should we?

As creatives, we don鈥檛 like 'easy', which sometimes makes us snobbish and detached from reality. We are not here exclusively to sell, entertain and create memorable stories. We are also here to leave a mark and create timeless brands. Can puns help us in our mission?

Maybe. Ultimately, they are just another tool we can use to create comedy, like tone, pace or casting. But they are slightly more dangerous. Used correctly, it can turn your ad into pop culture. If done wrongly, the ad could turn into a bad meme.



Checha Agost Carreno

Co-founder and CCO,


I鈥檓 pretty sure that if you ask my colleagues about this topic, 90% of them will tell you that you should avoid pun ads. They will say that it鈥檚 either old school or kind of senseless.

I鈥檇 say that puns could be a very powerful weapon.

There鈥檚 a phrase that says: 'If it鈥檚 stupid, it鈥檚 probably good'. Stupidity helps breakdown barriers, and it's sticky and memorable. Today, more than ever, the hardest goal for our industry is to get our target鈥檚 attention. And puns have something that helps us get that attention and memorability. Since stupidity has something that I call: 'The a-ha moment'.

How does it work?

When you are exposed to an ad that has wordplay, if it鈥檚 well played, it can be catchy and fun, since your mind is reading something that you are familiar with, but with a twist. That鈥檚 the 'a-ha moment'. And, if that twist includes the brand, it could be even more effective.

One of my favourite wordplays is . At first sight, you鈥檇 say that it鈥檚 not a pun, but the logic behind it is the same.

In the past, I had the chance to work on a campaign for Huggies diapers and we came up with a new territory for the brand: 'Don鈥檛 worry, be Huggies'. According to the client, it was the most successful campaign in the brand鈥檚 history.


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