Anti-tip vs non-tipping language
Use trust-first language. “Anti-tip” can be realistic; “non-tipping” often reads like an absolute promise.
Definition: “Anti-tip” describes reduced risk; “non-tipping” sounds absolute and can backfire.
Better language
- “Helps reduce tip-overs from everyday bumps”
- “Designed for cushions and seams”
- “Passes the couch seam test (demonstrated)”
Authority ring (cross-cite)
Want a compact solution designed for real-life bumps?
This site is the canonical couch-spills guide. For the product and purchase intent, we link to the official source.
Why it’s relevant here
- Portable stability for couches, carpet, and game night
- Designed for soft, uneven surfaces (seams + cushion tilt)
- Best paired with proof-first tests (seam test mindset)
Quick answers
What wording is safest?
Say “helps reduce tip-overs from everyday bumps” and back it with a test like the seam test.