“OH MY GOSH! Your hair is on fire!” Well, that’s probably not true. I only said it to get your attention. Getting attention is the most important part of online marketing. No matter how brilliant your ideas are, you can’t even offer them to your prospect unless you’ve made her look in your direction first.
“OH MY GOSH! Your hair is on fire!”
Well, that’s probably not true. I only said it to get your attention.
Getting attention is the most important part of online marketing. No matter how brilliant your ideas are, you can’t even offer them to your prospect unless you’ve made her look in your direction first.
You have to get your prospect’s attention before you can turn her into a reader, let her know how wonderful you are, or sell her something.
Do I have your attention yet?
Good. Now I’ll show you how to get someone else’s.
The brain is funny like that — in order to understand, the brain has to focus on specific information.
Attention helps us screen out the irrelevant and choose which information will enter, and stay, in our awareness. Our attention decides what to “pay attention to,” because human focus is limited, and we just can’t give our attention to everything.
Your reader’s minds are very selective. So we have to give them a reason to pay attention to our content instead of everything else out there they could be listening to.
Even if you have the best product, service, or information on the planet, it’s still difficult to get people to give you the time of day. Here are some common obstacles to getting your prospect’s attention:
These are all roadblocks you face in the attention-getting game, so you’ve really got to be good at showing readers why their limited attention should be directed to you.
You only have a few seconds to capture someone’s attention, so don’t take chances with clever, cute, or insider language or visuals, which are often lost on people. Don’t use inside jokes or industry terms, either, unless appropriate for narrow niche marketing. These tactics only tend to confuse audiences, if only for a few seconds, which is all it takes to lose them — and a confused mind does not pay attention.
Once you’ve managed to capture your reader’s attention, don’t waste it. Getting your reader’s attention is like the first strike of a One-Two punch — if you don’t land the second part, you’re not going to knock them out (and I mean KO in the good way).
Make sure your second punch, the actual information or message for which you grabbed her attention in the first place, is worthwhile.
If it’s valuable, you’ve paved the way for easy entry into her attention with future conversation.
If it isn’t, it’ll be that much more difficult to capture her attention the next time, as your prospect’s brain has already filed your information under “not worth our attention.”
Biz Tip Source: Copyblogger
About the Author: After being in the trenches herself for over 25 years, Marcia Hoeck now helps entrepreneurs create businesses that will run without them. Get a great free report 5 Power Shifts You Can’t Succeed in Business Without at her Breakthrough Business blog.