UBCNews - Marketing

Inside the Attention Economy: Why Brands with Intentionality Will Win


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Hello listeners and welcome to our series on marketing strategy. Today we're getting right down to brands' core intentions and how it fares in today's attention economy.

So What Actually Is the Attention Economy?

The average person now encounters an overwhelming number of branded messages each day, a reality that has transformed attention into a scarce commercial resource. In this crowded environment, visibility is increasingly affordable while meaningful connection is harder to secure. The result is a proliferation of content that often wins immediate notice but fails to produce loyalty or long-term value.

So what is The Core Problem? Are we just creating noise without any meaning?

Many organizations react to saturation by producing ever more content, chasing trends and platform algorithms. Such tactics can create short-lived spikes in engagement yet seldom translate into retention, advocacy, or a coherent brand identity. Research from the Edelman Trust Barometer finds that a clear sense of purpose influences purchasing decisions; audiences respond when brands communicate meaning, not just presence. In an attention economy defined by momentary reactions, the deeper challenge is shifting from ephemeral visibility to coherent significance.

Practical Approaches to Move From Attention to Intention Brands that succeed amid content overflow treat attention as an outcome of deliberate design rather than as an objective in itself. The following practices have proven effective for organizations intent on turning brief moments of notice into durable relationships:

Define the emotional aim before producing content: specify what feeling each campaign should evoke and why that feeling matters to the brand’s long-term positioning. Prioritize coherence over frequency: ensure that new assets align with existing narrative threads and reinforce a consistent point of view. Reclaim surprise and sensory detail: introduce unexpected elements—sound, texture, or an authentic human moment—that interrupt habitual scrolling and invite deeper attention. Measure what matters: track retention, repeat engagement, and advocacy rather than vanity metrics alone. Embed intention across teams: make the pursuit of meaningful connection an organizational responsibility, not only a marketing brief. Brands as Commentators, Not the Story Marketing agencies and consultancies increasingly argue that intention should guide creative execution. LO:LA, among others, has highlighted the distinction between attention and intention: attention can be bought or mimicked, while intention requires conviction, leadership, and disciplined choices about what to say and how to behave. Framing marketing around what a brand means, rather than merely what it makes, raises the likelihood that grabbing customers' attention will turn into recall and brand preference.

As automated tools and AI make it easier to generate content at scale, the differentiator will be human judgment. Intention cannot be fully automated; it must be defined, practiced, and defended. Brands that invest in this work position themselves to capture not only attention but the deeper outcomes that sustain growth: trust, loyalty, and advocacy.

For more information, visit the link in the descripton.

London : Los Angeles (LO:LA)
City: El Segundo
Address: 840 Apollo Street
Website: https://www.thelolaagency.com

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UBCNews - MarketingBy UBCNews