Your content does not have a reach problem. It has a first-two-seconds problem. Every piece of brand content you publish faces one binary test before anything else happens. Someone is scrolling. Their thumb is moving. Your piece either stops the thumb or it does not exist. Not "underperforms." Does not exist. Because a piece that gets scrolled past was never seen. It collected an impression the way a tree falling in an empty forest collects a sound. Technically yes. Functionally no. The scroll-stop test is the only metric that matters before any other metric can matter. Not impressions. Not reach. Not engagement rate. Those are all downstream. They all require the same precondition: someone stopped. And people stop for exactly one reason. Tension. Not information. Not beauty. Not even controversy alone. Tension: the gap between what someone expected and what they got. A question they cannot leave unanswered. A contradiction they have to resolve. A statement that challenges something they believed three seconds ago. If your opening line does not create that gap, the rest of your post, your carousel, your reel, your caption, your call to action, your carefully researched insight does not exist. You can optimize headlines. You can A/B test hooks. You can study formats. But the principle underneath all of it is simple. You have two seconds to create a gap someone cannot walk past. Build everything from there. Comment 'brand' to receive a free weekly branding strategy.

The Scroll-Stop Test: Brand Content Strategy That Works
Every piece of content faces one test first: does it stop the scroll? The only metric that matters before any other metric can matter.
brand strategy · content strategy · brand content · scroll stop · social media strategy
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