7.2 — Type #1: Functional Language (The Surface-Level Verbs of the World)
Functional language is the simplest layer.
It’s the verbs people in a specific world use constantly.
It describes:
- what they do
- what they attempt
- what they struggle with
- what they’re trying to accomplish
- what they can’t get themselves to do
Functional language is not emotional.
It’s not technical.
It’s not cultural.
It’s simply the actions they repeat every day.
Examples of REAL functional language niches:
→ “I help new dads in Adelaide who keep skipping their long runs because the sleep deprivation wrecks them.”
Functional verbs: skip, run, sleep, wrecks
→ “I help e-commerce operators who spend half their day firefighting fulfilment issues.”
Functional verbs: spend, firefighting, fulfilment
→ “I help swim-school owners in regional NSW who are drowning in admin every Monday.”
Functional verbs: drowning, admin, every Monday
Functional language tells the brain:
“Yes, this is something I actually do.”
But functional language alone cannot create trust.
For that, you need the next layers.