Where do you think visual aids will be most helpful?
A: Visual aids can be valuable both in titles and descriptions.
Titles: Audiences often have short attention spans, so adding visual cues (e.g., emojis or icons) next to titles helps reduce cognitive load and adds relevant context.
Descriptions: Graphs and data visualizations help clarify abstract concepts (e.g., high-context vs. low-context cultures) or complex data.
Should the one-liner be a hook or a summary?
A: Great question! If your goal is to keep readers engaged, the one-liner should function as a hook to encourage them to read further.
This is based on my past experience, especially in corporate America’s executive communication settings. So take it with a grain of salt :)
Ever thought about
1. adding visual aids
2. add one-liner after each bullet point, delve into the storytelling part
to reduce the cognitive load for newsletter readers? :)
love your suggestions! It would be great if I could get your input on
1. Where you think having visual aids will be the most helpful for you?
2. Will the one-liner be more like a hook instead of the summary?
thanks for your thoughtful comment :)
Where do you think visual aids will be most helpful?
A: Visual aids can be valuable both in titles and descriptions.
Titles: Audiences often have short attention spans, so adding visual cues (e.g., emojis or icons) next to titles helps reduce cognitive load and adds relevant context.
Descriptions: Graphs and data visualizations help clarify abstract concepts (e.g., high-context vs. low-context cultures) or complex data.
Should the one-liner be a hook or a summary?
A: Great question! If your goal is to keep readers engaged, the one-liner should function as a hook to encourage them to read further.
This is based on my past experience, especially in corporate America’s executive communication settings. So take it with a grain of salt :)