Derek Thompson of “The Atlantic” notes that C Level Contact List clickbait gives only the minimum of what a reader wants to know and hides too much. As a result, a “curiosity gap” comes up, which is exploited for marketing. When a vital C Level Contact List piece of information is skipped from the headline, the viewer suffers from curiosity to read more. Jake Beckman, who runs a Twitter feed “Saving You From Clickbait,” slams click baits for deliberately withholding C Level Contact List information for creating a ‘curiosity gap’ as a wilful manipulation of the reader.
Antithesis of SEO Pundits Forecast The C Level Contact List storming of clickbait on the web content space has blurred many hard guidelines on creating content that must be king. The rules of SEO pundits and guidelines by search engines are the worst hit. The respectful, traditional long-form content is undoubtedly content-rich and will not leave the user in a C Level Contact List lurch. Notably, SEO mandarins have insisted that only content-rich pages will survive on the web. But click bait defies all the above logic given its trending nature. More websites are turning to clickbait to C Level Contact List feed the hunger for over-emotive articles that people would not be getting from Google or search.
Click bait feed is also very C Level Contact List demographic centred— targeting millennials or the youngsters between18 to 30. Most online publishers are leveraging the varying mental states of users with catchy click baits. They know the art of C Level Contact List seducing readers with sexy headlines. Though the content is low in nutrition, click baits thrive with an appealing structure. Click bait articles are short, carry good images and brim with lists that talk C Level Contact List about 5 ways of sensing things or 10 things to do. That is nice for a passive online reading and a simple online experience.