It's on 73% of the small-business homepages we audit. It tells the reader nothing. And worse: it actively kills trust. Here's why — and what to write instead.
I have a small irrational hatred of the word "passionate" in business copy. Here's the rational version of it.
Reason 1: It tells the reader nothing
"We are passionate about coffee" gives a reader exactly one piece of information: this brand likes coffee. We could have guessed. The word 'passionate' carries no specific meaning beyond "we care", which is a baseline assumption for any business that opens its doors.
Reason 2: It's a tell
The word appears most often in place of something more specific. Brands say "passionate about X" when they haven't worked out what they actually do differently with X. It's a placeholder that survived the final edit.
Reason 3: It pattern-matches with low-trust copy
Visitors have read this sentence thousands of times. The pattern is "company says 'passionate about X', delivers same-as-everyone X." So when you say "passionate about X", you trip the reader's low-effort-copy detector. They start skimming. They probably leave.
Three replacements
Replacement 1: A specific decision
Instead of "passionate about quality", try "we won't take on more than four clients a month". That's a real, quotable decision a passionate-about-quality company would make.
Replacement 2: A specific number
Instead of "passionate about plumbing", try "6,400 jobs across the West Midlands, 4.9-star average". Numbers cut through where adjectives blur.
Replacement 3: A specific opinion
Instead of "passionate about good food", try "we don't put coriander on anything". The strongest brand-voice signal is having an opinion something else doesn't share.
The rule
If you find yourself writing "passionate about", stop. Ask: "what's the specific thing this passion makes us do?" The answer to that question is your actual sentence. Write it instead.