Many people talk about the brain in terms of its preference for pattern recognition—and yes, pattern recognition is useful for efficiency. But if you want to be remembered, you must engage the brain’s pattern separation system. That only happens when a message feels familiar but different enough to be filed as a new memory. Pattern separation helps us distinguish one experience from another, turning similar moments into unique memories.
If you want to geek out on neuroscience research, check out a paper by Yassa & Stark (2011) who showed how the hippocampus helps separate overlapping input to reduce memory interference (this is how you recognize your car in a parking lot full of similar cars). Bakker et al. (2008) also found increased hippocampal activity in tasks requiring memory discrimination. Oh, and by the way, pattern separation becomes less efficient with age, which is why older adults sometimes confuse similar past events—a useful angle if your audience is mature.
Speaking of audiences and business content, when there is too much familiarity in business content, the brain blends it with what came before and moves on. When two things feel too alike, the brain blurs them together. That’s what happens when your slides, your words, or your metaphors sound like everyone else’s: they get filed away under “same.”
So, to escape the middle frame in the image, consider adding mega contrast to your content—through surprise, emotion, or unexpected detail. That’s how you become impossible to ignore.