Capturing Attention
Saturday, March 17th, 2007One of the most perplexing elements of marketing is capturing the attention of the audience. No matter who your intended audience is, they are bombarded with information. The question of how to cut through the clutter and grab prospective audiences’ valuable and fragmented attention is paramount — without it, we have nothing.
One thing is for certain: you must capture your prospect’s attention before you can sell him anything, change his mind, or move him to act. In order to understand, the brain has to focus on one source of information at a time.
Attention:
Your prospect’s mind works like your cat’s mind works, screening out all information it doesn’t consider relevant.
While not many of us know what all-consuming information (or lack thereof) is cluttering our pets’ minds, we know lots about what’s occupying our prospects’ attention. The following are a few of the many obstacles that must be overcome when vying for prospects’ attention:
You have to give your prospects a reason to pay attention.
While I’ve got your attention, I’m going to ask you to ponder this for a day or two. Then please return for further discussion on capturing attention, including the two main reasons most prospecting and marketing efforts fail to capture attention, and how to overcome them.
[tags]attention, prospects, prospecting, cut through clutter, marketing[/tags]




















