Kangaroo Words

 

Practical Sales Training™  > Wordplay > Kangaroo Words

 

 

What is it?

Kangaroo words are words that secretly carry a smaller word inside them that means almost the same thing.
For example:

  • masculine contains male

  • chicken contains hen

  • resign contains sign

In wordplay for sales, you highlight the “hidden” word so people see two meanings at once. It’s a subtle visual trick that makes the word – and your message – more memorable.

How does it work?

Kangaroo words work because:

  • Our brains love patterns
    When people spot the hidden word, they feel a tiny “aha” moment. That makes your message more engaging and more likely to stick.

  • You get two meanings for the price of one
    The big word carries your main meaning. The hidden word can hint at a benefit, emotion or result you want people to notice.

  • You can style it visually
    By changing case, colour or weight on the inner word, you can guide attention without adding more copy.

Example:

  • MAscuLinE (with MALE picked out in caps or colour)
    One word, two layers: “masculine” as the main idea, “male” as the emphasis.

How can you use it?

Use kangaroo words anywhere you want a small jolt of interest without adding more text.

1. Headlines and taglines
Pick a word that already sits in your message and reveal the “joey” inside:

  • Fitness brand: trAIning → highlight AI for tech-led training

  • Money product: cAsIno → highlight AS IN “as in more rewards” (or similar play)

2. Product names and sub-brands

  • Build names where the inner word reinforces the benefit, then style it:

    • pROFit (ROF / OFI not quite, but you get the idea for your designers)

    • cAREful (ARE)

Even if it’s not a “pure” kangaroo word in the strict linguistic sense, you can still use the visual idea of highlighting letters inside a word to hint at meaning.

3. Visual hooks in graphics and slides

  • Take a key word in your slide title and:

    • Capitalise the inner word

    • Change the colour of those letters

    • Bold just the inner word’s letters

This works well for:

  • Social posts and carousels

  • Website hero images

  • Deck titles and section dividers

4. Hidden “easter eggs” in branding

  • Use kangaroo words as a quiet in-joke for your best clients or your audience:

    • A slide series where every title hides a relevant inner word

    • A campaign where the hidden word always points to the core benefit

People who notice feel clever. People who don’t still get a clear, simple message. Either way, your wordplay does its job without getting in the way of the sale.