You’ve probably heard that you only have three seconds to grab attention online, but those seconds don’t belong to the algorithm. They belong to the audience.

That’s the core insight I contributed to Signalytics’ an Amazon advertising agency in their breakdown on creating scroll-stopping content that actually connects.

The 3-second rule comes down to earning emotion before attention fades.

In those first few seconds, a hook has to do three things fast:
• Spark feeling — curiosity, nostalgia, recognition, even a little shock.
• Disrupt the pattern — break what people expect to see.
• Anchor familiarity — use something recognizable so the brain connects instantly.

When I’m creating hooks for clients, I focus on relatable disruption something that feels new but emotionally familiar. Whether it’s a raw moment from rehearsal or a single line that flips a trend, it has to earn curiosity fast and deliver on the payoff.

Here’s what I keep coming back to: the best scroll-stopping content isn’t about shock value. It’s about connection. That’s the real 3-second rule.

You can read the full article from Signalytics here, it’s worth the read if you want to stand out in a crowded feed without losing what makes your voice yours.


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