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The Monday Morning Memo

The Attention Span Myth

August 19, 2013

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https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/7f07079f-eabf-4e59-ad13-aa41ba507ed7/MMM130819-AttentionMyth.mp3

Commentators say that people today have a shorter attention span than in the past, but Jerry Seinfeld and I don’t believe this is true.

“There is no such thing as an attention span. There is only the quality of what you are viewing. This whole idea of an attention span is, I think, a misnomer. People have an infinite attention span if you are entertaining them.” – Jerry Seinfeld

“If you are entertaining them.”

I believe it’s presumptive to say that today’s generation is more easily distracted than previous generations. It is accurate, perhaps, to say they are more often distracted, but might not their forefathers have been just as often distracted had they carried electronic worlds in their pockets?

The truth is that people today have a low tolerance for boredom. Combine this with the constant availability of entertaining attractions and it’s easy to see why this question of attention span keeps popping up like a prairie dog.

Of course people today can pay attention. But why should they?

“We frequently forgive those who bore us, but cannot forgive those who we bore.” – Francois, Duc de La Rochefoucauld

We are insulted when people turn their attention away from us, especially when we believe what we’re saying is important.

You can blame today’s generation for bad manners and a short attention span. You can blame video games and smart phones. You can blame poor parenting and too much television. You can blame Alfred E. Neuman. You can blame God.

Or you can realize that attention will always turn toward whatever stimulus is most interesting. You can see the competition for attention is fiercer today than it has ever been. You can see that we need to up our game.

Our ability to gain and hold attention depends entirely upon our ability to stimulate the curiosity of others.

Can you stimulate curiosity? If you can’t, you will not hold attention. Not in your ads, not on the telephone, not face-to-face.

I tell my business partners, the Wizards of Ads, not to be offended when someone in the audience begins texting or playing a video game, but to take it as a signal to add some sparkle to their talk; do something more interesting than the distraction; win back the wandering mind. They are now among the most riveting speakers in America.

So what will it be? Will you blame the audience or blame yourself?

If you blame the audience, you eliminate all hope of improvement because there is nothing you can do to fix the audience. You must then conclude that society is circling the drain. “America is in decline, blah, blah, blah”.

But if you blame only yourself for not rising to the challenge of increased competition, that problem is easily solved:

All you have to do is become more interesting.

Begin by entering your subject from an unusual angle.
“Jerry Seinfeld and I don’t believe this to be true.”

Use examples that are relevant to the audience.
“…electronic worlds in their pockets.”

Specificity is more interesting than generalities.
“…this question of attention span keeps popping up like a prairie dog.”

Don’t over-explain. Let your listeners figure it out for themselves.
“You can blame Alfred E. Neuman.”

Unusual intonations and inflections captivate the ear and make it difficult to quit listening.

Talk faster than usual. Our speed of hearing greatly exceeds the speed of speech. Nothing bores people faster than taking too long to say too little.

Deliver big ideas quickly like boulders in an avalanche. Rapid distraction is a machine gun that requires you to collect bullets in advance.

You can no longer just make it up as you go along.

The future is a magical world that will belong to those who can gain and hold attention. How much of that magic would you like to own?

And that’s why it’s called – you have wondered, haven’t you? – “The Magical Worlds Communications Workshop.”

The next 3-day session begins November 5, 2013.

Preparation and practice. These are the keys.

Let us hand them to you.

Roy H. Williams
 

If you’ve ever managed or led a team of people, you know how quickly disunity can erupt; personalities pulling in different directions and every one of them think they’re right. But leadership doesn’t have to be a struggle. The profoundly impressive Dr. Bill Segura will teach you how to take productivity, efficiency and harmony back to your organization during his exciting new 2-day workshop at Wizard Academy. If your success depends upon people doing their jobs, these two days will probably make you more money than any other two days of your life. October 22-23.

Destinae, the wizard’s allegorical trilogy that fizzled in America but was wildly successful in Asia, has now been formatted for tablet devices, complete with all canine illustrations, interchaptoral comments and debates between panels of experts. Destinae goes far beyond double-entendre. It’s archetypal characters give it multiple-entendre with 14 obvious interpretations and many others not so obvious. I’ve got a link to that download for just a buck nintey-nine in the Rabbit Hole. Click the Show Ponies at the top of this page and Presto! you’re there. – Indy 

Garrett Gunderson believes it’s foolish to take the financial advice of any person who earns a sales commission when you buy what they’re selling. And Gunderson hates mutual funds. (Listen to him for a few minutes and you will, too.) According to Gunderson, savvy entrepreneurs understand how to make money, but then far too often they trust that money to others to invest for them. Garrett Gunderson is a cognoscenti of Wizard Academy and the author of the New York Times bestseller, Killing Sacred Cows. He’s also Dean Rotbart’s guest at MondayMorningRadio.com

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Random Quote:

“

But I do think the question this younger generation needs to be asking themselves is, ‘Ok, now what?’ Yes, it sucks, but it also sucks that previous generations were drafted and shipped off to die in wars.

So shit happens. And sometimes people slip through the cracks.

I’m happy to not call it ‘lazy’ if they’re willing to acknowledge that they still bear the responsibility of doing something… anything… to improve their lot.

Because lingering in whiney little bitch mode sure ain’t gonna get it done.

“

- Ryan Deiss

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The Wizard Trilogy

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