<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 slogan is a memorable phrase used in advertisement, and flattery advertisement is a technique that uses flattery to entice the customer and make them feel good about the purchase. Here is an example of a slogan that uses flattery advertising
"Speedmasters, for those that prefer a healthy life instead of a easy life."
The customer sees that the woman in the image is running on the highway instead of driving in a car, so when you combine it with the slogan, the customer feels like they are choosing a healthier lifestyle by purchasing running shoes.
The passive voice formed by Subject + verb to be+Past Participle. The object in the active voice becomes the subject of the passive voice and the subject of the active voice is either the object in the passive voice or is not mentioned.
The passive voice is used when we don't know the performer of the action. Example: “The house was built in 1884” in this case we don't know who built the house.
The passive voice is used when the focus is on the receiver of the action. Example: “Five people were killed in a car accident”, in this case the focus is on “five people”
The passive voice is used when the focus is on the action. Example: “The car was stolen”, in this case the emphasis is on the fact that the car was stolen and not on who stole it.
So the three options that apply to the uses of the passive voice are:
when the performer of the action is unknown
when you want to emphasize the action directly
when you want to emphasize the receiver of the action
Answer:
- James desired to mirror the reality of a world in which most people are morally ambiguous
- Daisy is a young person who is still trying to define her identity as an individual.
Explanation:
This story shows a psychological description of the mind of a young woman and an analysis of the traditional views of a society where she clearly does not fit in. Through Daisy's story, Henry James debates his opinion about Europeans and Americans' beliefs about each, and also about the most general prejudices that are common in any culture.
Authors would use as narrators when writing about the Cuban Revolution the following:
1. Cuban exiles who emigrated to the United States after the Cuban Revolution
2. Cuban exiles who fought against Fidel Castro
3. Cubans who stayed in their country after the Cuban Revolution
4. Cuban citizens who are loyal to Fidel Castro
5. Americans who are neighbors of Cuban exiles