To work with this technique, is to help simplify your message, the main thing you want to say, into one sentence or one visual. Then let your imagination push it from there, all the way to outrageous exaggeration.
Exaggerate the benefit. Exaggerate the problem. Exaggerate size, the physical appearance.
Exaggerate Burger King’s “Have it your way.” And you might end up with a subservient chicken.
Take the basic idea you want to communicate, your concept, then exaggerate it. Take it to extremes.
Push it beyond reason, beyond reality. In the copy. With visuals. Or both.
Just make sure to exaggerate your exaggeration. Because a BIG exaggeration is interesting, and a powerful way to get communicate your concept. A small exaggeration is simply a misleading ad.
An interesting approach is to exaggerate the visual, but understate the copy. Or exaggerate the copy and keep the visual simple.

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