Get seen before you get read.
A resume, a thumbnail, an ad — each one is scanned in seconds before anyone decides to engage. These guides unpack where attention actually lands, and how to put your best work directly in its path.
Resume
Get past the six-second recruiter scan and land the interview.
Best AI Resume Tools in 2026: A Category-by-Category Guide
Five categories of AI resume tools, what each is good for, and where they fall short.
Read blogFree Resume Review: What to Check Before You Apply
Most free reviews check the words. The one that matters checks the glance.
Read blogWhat Recruiters Notice First on a Resume (and How to Use It)
There's a predictable pattern to where eyes go first. Get in its path.
Read blogHow Long Do Recruiters Actually Look at Your Resume?
The first pass is a glance, not a read. Here's how to survive it.
Read blogYouTube
Win the click in a crowded feed before you ever hit publish.
How to Test Your YouTube Thumbnail Before You Post
There are two kinds of thumbnail testing — after you post and before — and most creators only know the first.
Read blogHow to Make a YouTube Thumbnail That Gets Clicks
Great thumbnails are engineered for the glance, not admired up close — here are six principles that win the one-second scan.
Read blogWhy Your YouTube Thumbnails Aren't Getting Clicks
Your thumbnail is never judged alone — it's judged in one second, against eight rivals on the same screen.
Read blogStudio
Make sure your ads, packaging, and designs get seen — not skipped.
How to Test Ad Creative Before You Spend on Media
Five ways to test ad creative before you spend, what each is good for, and where predicted attention fits.
Read blogAI Attention Prediction vs. Eye-Tracking: Which Do You Need?
Both show where people look. They're good at very different jobs.
Read blogWhy Your Ad Creative Gets Ignored (and What to Do About It)
An impression is not attention. Here's why people skip your ad and how to fix it before you pay to run it.
Read blogGuides
How attention prediction works, and why it beats guessing.