Attention is the scarcest resource
People do not browse the feed; they scan it, fast, filtering almost everything out. Your ad is not competing with other ads — it is competing with friends, family, news, and entertainment for a fraction of a second of attention. That is the real arena.
How the brain triages the feed
In that first glance, the brain makes a snap relevance decision largely on a single dominant element — a face, a bold word, a high-contrast shape, a pattern interrupt. Cluttered ads lose because there is no single thing for the eye to grab. Clarity wins the first second; complexity loses it.
Designing for the snap judgment
- One dominant focal point the eye lands on instantly.
- High contrast so it survives a fast scroll.
- A concrete, legible hook readable at thumbnail size.
- Pattern interrupt — something that breaks the visual rhythm of the feed.
Emotion before information
People feel before they read. The strongest statics trigger an emotional reaction — curiosity, surprise, recognition, desire — in the instant before any conscious processing. Lead with the feeling; deliver the information once you have earned the attention.
Key takeaways
- You compete with the entire feed, not just other ads.
- The first glance hinges on one dominant element — keep it singular.
- Design for the snap judgment: focal point, contrast, legibility, interrupt.
- Trigger emotion first; deliver information second.