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What Really Gets Read

People have limited time and even more limited attention. The key in marketing is to capture some of this limited attention and get people to read more. So it pays to understand what things people first read because these are the areas you need to grab attention.

People tend to read the following first (in no particular order):

1 - Headlines
2 - Sub titles and sub headlines
3 - photo captions
4 - short bolded or highlighted text
5 - small insert boxes
6 - hand written notes

Of course this does not mean you can overwhelm your audience with too many "things that get read" or none of them will get read.

And each of these have different uses in different contexts. For example, a hand written note in an ad on the internet does nothing where a post-it note that is hand written on a mailing gets attention.

So what sorts of things grab attention?

1 - Curiosity. if you can arouse curiosity, people will read more.

2 - Humour. If people feel they will be entertained, they will read more.

3 - Powerful benefit for the specific audience. This one is more complex because it involves find the intersection between people who have the need and value the benefit and the readership/viewership of the audience.

4 - Emotion - shock, awe, fear, sex can all grab attention. People buy first with their emotions which is why most large agency ads play to emotions.

Without attention, you do not get read. So it is worth spending time on "what people first pay attention to".

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Oct. 21 2009 09:00 AM | Posted by Jim Estill | Comments 3 posted | Categories Strategy -

Comments

Jim,

A great post. I thought I would add that many of the visual clues that people find attractive on a page is also true of search engine algorithms. Google will determine what a web page theme is all about by paying special attention to Headlines, Bold Font, Bullets and of course the Title Tags. I'm not sure if content could shock, awe or make the Google algorithm fearful - but I wouldn't be surprised if that was in development!

Oct. 22 2009 11:32 AM | Posted by
Don Lange`
 

Great Post and I agree with your comments. I would also add that after the title and subtitle people will read the 1st paragraph (perhaps the first 3) then scroll to the end. I believe the last paragraph needs to be very powerful. thanks

Oct. 30 2009 07:06 AM | Posted by
Bob Tracz
 

No mention of social media here...we are quickly being limited to "headline only" 140 character sound bites...no content.

Future career opportunity: Headline maker - an expert within 140 characters.

Mar. 03 2010 01:16 PM | Posted by
Jay McBain
 
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