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As always, you can find all of our incredible deals in the show notes or at
youngimpropheting.com/deals. Yap fam, we're living in the era of social media and if you're an entrepreneur, your ability to grab attention online can make or break your business. So I thought what better time to bring back the "yap creator" series. We're kicking things off with something I know a lot of you struggle with, the psychology of attention and content creation. Because let's get real, the internet is noisy. Everyone is fighting for the same eyeballs and most
content gets scrolled right past. But the top creators, they've cracked the code. In this episode, you'll hear how people like Gary V, Sean Cannell, and Alex Hermosie hook their audience in seconds. Keep them watching and turn casual viewers into loyal fans. We're talking thumbnails,
“title, storytelling, the whole game. Everything you need to stop the scroll and start building”
real trust with your audience. There's so much good stuff packed into this episode, so let's jump right into it. Youngimpropheter is welcome back to the first ever episode of the "Yap creator" series. The series is a deep dive into the art and science of content creation. Everything from mastering attention to understanding the psychology that fuels audience engagement. Every piece of content you put out should be meaningful, intentional, and ultimately drive action. The series
is all about giving you the tools to make that happen. Throughout these episodes, I'll share insights from powerful creators who have been guests on the show, experts like Sean Cannell,
Gary V, and Alex Hermosie. Today we're kicking things off with a critical first topic.
The psychology of attention and content creation. In a world where attention spans are shorter than ever mastering this is essential. The goal is to make people stop scrolling, engage, and stay with you until the very end. Top content creators use sneaky tactics to hook you into their videos and get you to want to keep watching them. With about only 8 seconds to make an impact,
“it's crucial to stand out. Imagine a crowded street where everyone's shouting to be noticed.”
Your goal is to make viewers stop and pay attention. On platforms like YouTube, thumbnails and titles are your first chance to hook in viewers. Thumbnails act like curb appeal. The more visually striking and straightforward they are, the more likely that people are to click. Titles should be directed keyword-focused and hint at the value that you'll deliver. Bulltitles at spark curiosity or make clear promises set the stage for viewers to stay engaged.
Shawn Cannell, who built his YouTube channel from scratch, stresses the importance of thumbnails and titles as a strong first line of offense. He recommends clean, simple thumbnails with bold colors, minimal text and a clear focal point. A cluttered thumbnail or a vague title is not going to spark curiosity. It's just going to confuse people. Less is more. The goal is to create a positive that stops viewers from scrolling and makes them want to watch. If you've been creating content
for a while, you've probably heard a lot about titles and thumbnails, but Shawn adds another key
element. Topic. Here's what he has to say about that. YouTube is recommending brand new channels,
but here is the painful part for you listening to this. If you get a chance on this free platform to get in front of a complete stranger, are you going to miss that opportunity or are you going to
Get it?
when those channels get recommended, I'm like, I'm that title doesn't really grip me, that thumbnail
is not that great. Those are going to be the two metrics. What is included in that topic, right time, right place? It's the topic itself and then a good title that makes it even more interesting, like that's a irresistible video. You want to get the click and those are what you're optimizing for. Shawn says the biggest factor to grab people's attention is having a topic at the right place and the right time. Gary Ve calls this the tick-tockification of social media. When we spoke
earlier this year about his new book day trading attention, Gary broke it down for me. It's a litified things for me. For example, I'm one of the biggest LinkedIn marketing experts. I teach like a
“two-day class. It's the most popular class and I can hack the algorithm. That's why people hired me.”
So one of the things that's happening this year is that they're prioritizing interest relevancy over engagement probability. It used to be that you would post something motivational, something inspirational, if people shared it, you'd go viral. Now it's all about posting a specific topic, educating people, and then LinkedIn will match users based on the things they like, the interest graph, exactly. So I actually wanted you to, can you go super deep on the interest graph?
Because I feel like this is the major trend happening with all social media sites. And that's what it's from your book. I was like, oh, he's right on the money. This is, yeah, I told my brother and I thought Tumblr was going to be bigger than Facebook and Twitter. I went Twitter, Facebook,
Tumblr, in my investing. Those are the first three companies I invested in, in my life,
out of a liquor store, New Jersey. It's like, it's like, I'm like, you could see, I'm laughing, I'm like, it's so improbable. Like, it's absurd. Karma. I thought Tumblr was going to be the biggest
“because of this conversation. It just took 15 years for it to happen. Again, everybody, social”
media for the first decade plus was very simple. It was like email marketing. You would get as many people to follow you as possible. And then you would post and a percentage of those people would see it. That was the game. And that was easy for me to figure out because I did email marketing in 97, 98, 99 when that was like new. And I was a big winner in that game. That was underpriced attention. I was competing against liquor stores that were making catalogs. But I was getting to the customer
for free instead of how much a catalog cost and getting to them faster. It was huge. It was foundational.
So I saw the same thing in social. So I'm asked big followings. That was the focus.
TikTok application of social media. Like I talk about in the book. That interest graphic algorithm is now going to eat up everything because it's better. It keeps you on the platform longer. Mm-hmm. Let's use common sense. You go to your Facebook. You're now 27. You went on Facebook at 18. The people you followed are people you met like one night hooking up or at a random party, whatever. And now you're seeing posts of them like them in Ohio with their aunt. And you're
like, I don't give a fuck. But just like email, we don't unsubscribe from our fucking list. We just deleted or archive it or like we don't put in the work to clean up our shit. So you kept seeing shit. You didn't give a fuck about which made you not spend four hours on it. It made you spend 14 minutes on your feet. Yeah. Then you go to TikTok. And you're seeing unlimited shit that you fuck with. And four hours later, you like what the fuck just happened. Yeah. That's good for TikTok.
That was bad for Facebook. Now all of them, we're going to be like TikTok. And every social network is going to have the four you page DNA in them for quite a while now. Mm-hmm. Maybe
“forever because it's more humanly true. Mm-hmm. That's what I focus on. And that's why”
focus on your niches about the fuck up everyone. You're going to need to talk about more things than ever that are true to you because you're going to need that content to find more different audiences for you to be as big as you want to be. Mm-hmm. I was going to ask you, does that mean riches are in the niches now because of the interest graph. But to your point, if you've got multiple topics and the game, God. Think about how weird I am. The reason I know
everybody from afar, especially in the game you're in, are like, what? Like garage sale videos. Then my grid has been fucked up for 12 years. And it was like, make a good grid. It's got to be on brand. I'm like, you fucking have no idea what you're talking about. The grid is like 5% of the consumption. The feed is the whole game. So you go to my fucking thing. You're like, who is this? Jets video, garage sale, keynote, board meeting. Like I'm confusing the shit out of people
because I don't care about the grid. I care about being as relevant to as many different people as humanly possible. Let's talk about viral. Sure. I'm gonna use baseball. I know it's not as popular anymore, but it's the easiest one. Going viral is hitting a grand slam. Mm-hmm. Do you know anything about baseball? Oh, I know. I know enough. Yeah. You know what a strike out is? Yes. Good. Most posts are strike out. Okay. Right? Doesn't do what you want to do. Mm-hmm. I'm in the business of singles
and doubles and triples with the occasional home run and grand slam, but could give a shit about hitting a grand slam. Or if you don't follow baseball, everyone, I won't use an analogy. I don't ever think about going viral. Ever. I only think about making good content that is valuable
To the people on the other side and that means that most of my stuff will con...
Occasionally do better than solid and once in a while go viral. I believe that most people
suck at social media because they try to go viral on every post and when they don't, they cry to mommy. So you're more about posting as much as you can, hopefully they all do pretty good. And posting as much as you can is also based on self-awareness of like, I start with like, do I have something to say that could bring someone value? Again, I need everybody here this. That comes in all shapes and sizes. I mean this. If you're funny and you do a skit like King Batch, that's value.
You made somebody smile and it's a fucked up world out there and the feeds are fucking negative and media's negative and like that little ha-ha-ha. If you're attractive, like people like looking at attractive people, if you know something about LinkedIn, that's valuable to the people that want LinkedIn. Like we all have value. If you know something about BMX or wine or sneaker like
“value value value, I think people have niche themselves in a corner. What happens if you know a lot”
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relevant audiences if you have a clear topic. Gary also mentions that value comes in all forms.
This is really important, and we'll get back to it in a bit. But first, let's move on to openings
and introductions of our content. At young and profiting, we're intentional with our
Intros because we know the first few seconds are everything.
away is by creating a curiosity gap. The curiosity gap is a psychological concept that refers to
the space between what people know and what they want to know. It's used in marketing and storytelling to entice audiences by providing just enough information to spark curiosity without fully satisfying it. This prompts people to take action, like clicking, reading, watching, to close the gap and satisfy their curiosity. You want to keep opening curiosity gaps throughout your content. One way to leverage the curiosity gap is by using a headline overlay, an overlay like seven ways
to avoid burnout. This immediately tells the viewer what values are going to gain,
“and it sets expectations by sparking curiosity. Well, what are the seven ways?”
And notice that I used a number in this example. Number seven, seven ways to avoid burnout. Numbers attract attention because they're specific. What are the seven ways? It makes you wonder why is there seven ways and not eight or nine ways? Odd numbers are more specific. Numbers that are not whole numbers are even more specific and attract more attention. Numbers immediately tell the audience what to expect, given the hook more of a defined promise.
Seven ways is definitely more enticing than just the ways to avoid burnout. And lastly, you can increase the punch cheer hook by adding more numbers like revenue targets, timeline, or implied speed. And nobody knows how to hook viewers in more than somebody like Alex Hermosey, who is basically blown up overnight and become one of the top brands online through his engaging videos. Here's him demonstrating how to spark curiosity with numbers in the intro of a recent
YouTube video. In this video, I'm going to show you how to turn $1,000 into $45,000 through email. And
over the last 90 days, we spent just under 10 million emails from acquisition.com. And we generate
tens of millions of dollars across the portfolio using email itself. And in this video, I'm going to break down emails that I've sent and I'll give you the 10 tactics that have worked very well for us so far. Aside from hooking people and with a text headline overlay, you can also hook people in with action at the beginning of a video. In the example that I just played, Alex holds up two sheets of paper when he says how to go from 1k to 45k. Action could also
be something like a hand gesture, a close-up of a sizzling frying pan, jumping into the frame, running through a brick wall, anything that's going to surprise and shock your audience and get them
“hook. The last thing that I'll say about intros is that you should be intentional about sharing”
what your audience can expect right at the beginning. This gives them a reason to stay engaged. Promise something and then you have to deliver on that promise throughout the video. Former Yapgess Ken Okazaki, who heads up as media global and helps his clients generate millions of dollars from video marketing, summarized this best. Yeah, let me think a quick picture for you. Say you're a drug dealer, right? And social media,
by the way, I see the closest analogy is it's like a farm, right? And like let the out-of-plow the land on the farm and the person who owns the farm is, you know, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, they own the farm and you are leasing a plot. Now what's going on is when you create content, then the product is your content. And they use that and they sell it. The only thing on social media, the university across all platforms that is a universal currency is time, people
buy time, the advertisers buy it from the farmer. And you're just the person who's volunteering
to create, you know, to work the farm for them, which is, you know, amazing that they convinced us to do this.
But so now that we've got this analogy where time is the amount ofizable product, it actually is money. It's bought and sold every single day, millions of times, billions of dollars. And when you understand this, then what you gotta think is like, well, if I am buying and selling time, and that's the currency of social media, when so much is a video, let's say this spent three minutes, they pay you three units of time. And what are you getting in turn? What you gotta give them is a dopamine hit.
Because otherwise, they will not get addicted, they will come back, they won't feel like they got their money's worth. So if you say, hey, get over here, you know, spend three minutes with me, and I'm going to give you dopamine hit. They come, they pay their three minutes and you don't give it. Two things are going to happen. Number one, they're going to feel like, hey, you are a scumbag.
“Number two, I've never coming back and I might even tell people to avoid you. And that's what”
happens when the promise doesn't meet the delivery. So what you want to do is give them a dopamine hit. And I think another way to say this is aha moment. If you could get people like right now, I see you're nodding, I love that. When I see people nodding, I'm like, that's, we're on the same page. They're having an aha moment here. And that transaction was successful, very likely they'll come back. So you just got to deliver what you say. You can deliver. If you say I'm going to teach you the most
mind-blowing strategy to use chatGPT that will earn me $12,000 in the next 30 days.
Then you actually show screenshots and demonstrate it.
say it and then give some general advice without showing anything that's actually believable, not a high chance that people will continue coming back. They'll be disappointed. Okay, let's move on to how we can keep listeners engaged after the intro. The concept of pattern interrupts can be extremely effective in longer videos. Pattern interrupts are unexpected elements in the content that break up the usual flow and give users something to focus on,
which rein gauges their attention. These can be set in zoomins, quick cuts, unique sound effects, or color changes. Another approach is to build and novelty with small surprising elements. This could mean adding a quick animated graphic, a pop of color, b-roll footage, or a brief audio feel that stands out from the usual rhythm. When you sparingly, these surprises act as many resets for viewers to refocus and help them stay engaged. Grabbing attention with video editing
tactics can help your videos move fast-paced. It can help them be more engaging, but real saying
“power comes with good storytelling. People remember stories far more than they remember facts.”
Why? Because stories involve emotions and emotions make things more memorable. You want to use a value first approach in your videos that gives your audience insights that hook them in from the start. Then you want to guide them through a mini story throughout the video that keeps them engaged until the end. When we create content, we want it to be more than just information. We want it to feel like an experience. One way to create this feeling is through
a simple, relatable, free step storytelling structure. Number one, introduce the comment problem. Number two, share a relatable struggle. Number three, provide a solution. Think of it like this.
The problem is the hook. The struggle is the emotional connection, and the resolution is the payoff.
This arc makes viewers feel invested in an outcome because they've emotionally connected with the journey. Relatedability is key here because people connect with stories that mirror their own challenges. Maybe you're talking about work-life balance or the pressure to succeed in a competitive market. These are experiences that many people relate on on a deep level. And when you tap into this emotional common ground, and when you share your own stories, you're not just holding
attention, you're creating loyalty. Your audience feels like they know you, and more importantly, that you know them. This mutual understanding builds trust and engagement over time. Storytelling is a skill I think that we should all spend time improving. Yasser Khan, one of the most sought after public speaking coaches in the world recently came on and gave me his three arms to good
storytelling. The most important thing that I feel storytelling does is it's just memorable.
“People just remember for much longer. So if I asked you, do you want people to remember what you said?”
Yes, okay. Do you want to share your message in a way that people remembered? Yes, then you must do it in a format of a story. How many of your three-hour lectures do you remember from college? Like none. Exactly. How many movies since you were a child, you remember? A plenty. And all of those are stories. I imagine that those were 30 bullet points from start to finish. No. So you have to learn to create imagery and you have to get people to feel something. If they
don't feel anything, they will not remember. So talk to us about how we can become better story intelligence. Like how can we start to infuse stories and the things that we do and get better at it? Is there a formula? Or how should we think about it? There are three things that I talk about.
The three are us to be remembered. The first is your story has to be repeatable.
If I hear the story, can I hear it long enough to then repeat it to someone else? So if you've heard your favorite set of comedian, you have this bit that you like. Oh, you have a great bit on dating, a great bit on whatever. You can repeat it to other people. If I can't repeat it, I won't remember it. So the first thing has to be repeatable. Number two, does it really emotion? Do I feel something when I hear your story? I can tell you about how I
got into my car and I got gas and I came back home. What's the point? It's about pointless story. But is there a point to it? And you'll be shocked how many things you can make sound emotional. Like earlier we talked about cleaning the dishes. And just with the volume, we made it sound a little bit emotional, right? Yeah. Someone asked me in a conference of 500 loan officers, napkins. And we made napkins emotional. So can you talk about that with emotion? Can you
resonate and relay your emotion? And number three, I feel like this is the strongest thing when it comes to storytelling. Can you reframe an existing belief? If your story tells me what I already know, it's not changing my belief. Can you take me from point in a point B and reframe
“how I look at the world? That's what a good story does. So three things. It has to be repeatable.”
You have to relay emotion and it has to reframe your beliefs. It's so true. Stories like really trigger our own emotions. We feel more relatable to the person talking. And to your point, it helps us question like our own beliefs. And that's the point. And that's, especially with social
Media, gets people commenting and giving their thoughts are agreeing, they're...
and it kind of like causes a lot of engagement. So like you heard it from Yasser, storytelling
“is so important to connect with your audience. So before you start your next video or content piece,”
think about structuring it as a mini story with three parts. The problem, the struggle,
and the resolution. Even if it's a short clip, the structure can make it feel like a complete journey,
“keeping viewers engaged from start to finish. The goal isn't just to get them to watch.”
It's to make them care for long enough to get the value. And when you get them to care for long enough to stay and get the value, they're going to come back for more and become engaged fans. Today, we explored the psychology of attention and content creation, touching on everything from hooks
to pattern interrupts. In this landscape where attention is currency, those first few seconds count,
but providing value while you hold attention can keep your audience coming back for more. If you're new to all of this, please don't feel overwhelmed. Content creation is a journey, and you don't have to apply everything all at once. Start by choosing one or two techniques we discussed today, maybe experiment with a stronger hook or try adding pattern interrupts into your videos. Small consistent changes can lead to big results over time.
Well, I can't wait to dive into our next episode. We're going to explore the art of building
“trust and authenticity online to key elements that help create a loyal engaged audience.”
Thanks for tuning in, and I'll see you in episode two of the Yavkreator series.


