The same information feels different depending on your purpose
Intent is your rhetorical purpose. Are you trying to hook emotion? Explain facts? Build a case? Guide to action? The answer shapes everything—from word choice to visual emphasis.
Capture attention. Create emotional connection.
Lead with a narrative that makes readers care before you sell them anything
Appeal to emotion, imagination, and curiosity. Make them feel something.
When your intent is to inform, readers expect clarity and completeness.
Structure matters when explaining
Present information in logical order. Build understanding step by step.
Include all necessary details. Readers trust completeness.
Show the full picture. Hide nothing. Facts stand on their own.
Persuasion is different from information. You're not just explaining—you're arguing.
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Intent guides action. When you intend for readers to DO something, make it clear, urgent, and easy.
Emotional connection. Makes readers care. Best for heroes, openings, testimonials.
Facts and clarity. Explains mechanisms. Best for features, documentation, technical content.
Builds credibility and argument. Addresses objections. Best for comparisons, social proof, case studies.
Guides to action. Creates urgency. Best for CTAs, next steps, conversions.
Each section should know its intent. When intent is clear, design follows naturally.
© 2026 Purpose shapes perception. Know your intent.