Why Prospects Don’t Listen Any More (and what to do about it)

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The human brain hasn’t caught up with our pace of life. To get more people to do business with you, communicate in a way that accommodates the attention deficit that prevails.

America’s attention deficit problem

America has an attention deficit, and it is massive, ubiquitous and plays a much bigger role in our everyday lives than we realize. Let’s face it: As people, we aren’t there anymore. We aren’t present as we used to be.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t mean clinical ADHD which, according to Harvard Medical School, affects only 4% of the U.S. adult population. For most of us, our attention deficit doesn’t warrant a medical diagnosis. But that doesn’t mean we aren’t prone to intermittent problems with our attention span.

Most of us regularly:

  • Talk to someone and halfway through the conversation realize that you have no idea what they even said;
  • Read an email and a short time later have no recollection of reading it;
  • Become completely demotivated to accomplish a task because it required you to take multiple steps;
  • Look at a sheet of paper with multiple items listed on it and have no idea where to start or how to respond;
  • Are in a state of mind where you are so stimulated that you can’t slow down;
  • Realize that during dinner you paid more attention to your text messages than your spouse or kids;
  • Send an email unintentionally before you finished typing it;
  • Are so focused on what you are going to say next or do next that you have no clue what the person speaking has been talking about for the last 20 seconds; or
  • Wake up in the morning and check your iPhone before you say good morning to the person lying next to you.

On-the-go, isolated from our own minds, anti-social and impulsive is the way we exist as members of the human race. How do you, as advisors, get prospects’ attention in a world of nano-second attention spans?