A menu that bolds every item is not a menu. It is a ransom note from a diner with laminate anxiety.
But a menu that places a little typographic tuxedo around one item?
The Burger That Made the Grill Believe in God
Now we’re talking.
Marketing has become very good at saying things. Less good at pointing. And pointing, when done well, is not a lesser art. It is the tiny carnival barker inside the customer’s brain saying, “Psst. This one. This is the door with the tiger behind it.”
Emphasis is one of the most underused tools in marketing because it feels too simple. Too primitive. Too much like putting a neon arrow over a sandwich. But that’s exactly why it works. The human brain is a distracted squirrel wearing a Bluetooth headset. It does not want twenty equal choices. It wants a clue.
The marketer’s job? It’s to choose what deserves the spotlight and let everything else become the velvet curtain.
So…how do you use emphasis without turning your website, email, or sales deck into a parade float driven by a caffeinated gofer?
First, pick one thing. Not three. Not seven. One. The feature that unlocks belief. The benefit that changes the buyer’s posture. The proof point that makes the skeptic put down their tiny courtroom gavel.
Second, emphasize the thing the customer already wants to care about. Don’t bold your internal roadmap poetry. Bold the sentence that helps them survive Tuesday.
Third, use emphasis as a promise, not decoration. If you spotlight something, it better matter. A highlighted claim with no substance is just glitter on a parking ticket.
Fourth, rotate the spotlight by context. A CFO wants margin. An operator wants fewer fires. A user wants the button to stop hiding like a woodland creature with commitment issues. Same product. Different bold.
The best marketers don’t just write better words. They create better attention.
Stay Positive & Become A Choreographer Of Attention
