<span><span>elp them see what you see. You might be focusing on yourself when creating messages about your business, thinking that everyone sees things the way you do. But they don’t. People won’t “hear” you, or pay attention, until they perceive what you perceive. So you’ve got to make your position crystal clear — help them to see what you see, using storytelling, description, personal experiences, case histories, and anything that will put the prospect in the right position to understand your message.</span><span>Make it personal. When you make your writing personal, you make it important. Personally interesting or perceptually meaningful information can grab attention, bring clarity, and help it slip right into your prospective client’s awareness. You don’t have to do a lot of explaining to tell someone his house (or his hair) is on fire — because it’s so personal to him. You immediately get attention.</span><span>Use emotion. Emotion is a great way to bring clarity to your business messages while making them personal. Emotion also comes with the triple bonus of adding clarity, giving clients a reason to talk about you and your business, and triggering the circuits in the brain that activate behavior and decisions — emotion is much better at that than logic is. Emotional messages get attention.</span><span>Don’t take chances with attention </span></span>
A :) The poem is both a celebration and a warning
Answer:
The only problem with our plan was that it required me to stay out way after my bedtime
Explanation:
u must use proper.word that have strong meaning towards the sentence like for instanst great u can u good.
The sentence that is correctly punctuated is, "Snack time had finally come, but no one had brought any snacks." The correct answer is option A. The sentence is an example of a compound sentence. A compound sentence consists of two independent clause. These clauses are connected either by a coordinating conjunction or a semicolon. But in this sentence, it is connected with a coordinating conjunction. The rule applied here is that, after the first clause, a comma should be applied before starting the next clause introduced by the conjunction.