// description
The AIDA model describes four stages a customer passes through before making a purchase: Attention (becoming aware the product exists), Interest (engaging with the product's message and wanting to learn more), Desire (developing an emotional want for the product), and Action (making the purchase). The model is used to structure advertising copy, sales presentations, landing pages, and entire marketing funnels, ensuring that each stage is addressed and that the transition from one stage to the next is smooth.
// history
E. St. Elmo Lewis, an American advertising pioneer, first described the model in 1898 in a column about advertising principles. It is one of the oldest frameworks in marketing and has been adapted, extended, and critiqued for over a century, but its basic structure continues to influence how marketers think about customer journeys and persuasive communication.
// example
A KDP author structures her Amazon book listing using AIDA. Attention: the cover design uses bold contrast and an intriguing title that stands out in search results. Interest: the subtitle expands on the promise ("A Nurse's Daily Planner Built Around Your Shifts, Not a 9-to-5"). Desire: the book description opens with a scenario the buyer recognises ("You finish a 12-hour night shift and the last thing you want is to spend 20 minutes decoding a planner designed for office workers"), then presents the solution and includes social proof. Action: the Kindle preview shows the most compelling interior pages, the price is competitive, and the "Buy Now" button is the only logical next step.
// katharyne's take
Your Amazon listing and your Etsy listing are AIDA in action. Attention is your cover (thumbnail in search results). Interest is your title and first line of description. Desire is your full description — this is where you paint the picture of how their life is better with this product. Action is your pricing, your reviews, and your CTA. Most creators spend all their optimisation effort on Attention (cover design) and neglect Desire (description copy). A mediocre cover with compelling copy will consistently outperform a stunning cover with generic description text.
// creative uses
- Use AIDA to structure a Pinterest pin sequence: the pin image earns Attention, the pin title creates Interest, the pin description builds Desire with a specific outcome promise, and the link goes to a landing page with a clear single Action (opt-in or buy).
- Apply AIDA to a Gumroad product page for a digital download: the hero image and headline handle Attention and Interest; a short demo video or sample page handles Desire; a single visible price with a "Download Now" button handles Action. Remove every element that doesn't serve one of these four stages.
- Map your current YouTube channel intro against AIDA: does the first 5 seconds earn Attention from search thumbnails? Does the hook create Interest? Does the video body build Desire for the linked product? Does the end screen provide a clear Action? Most creator YouTube channels fail at Interest — the hook is too slow.
// quick actions
- Open your best-selling listing right now. Paste the description into a doc and annotate each sentence as A, I, D, or A. If you have three lines of A and one line of D, rewrite immediately — Desire is where sales happen.
- Write one "Desire sentence" for your next product before you design the cover: describe the exact moment the buyer's life is better because they have it. Use this sentence as your cover brief.
- Check your Etsy listings: does every listing have a visible CTA in the last line of description? ("Perfect for gifting — order by [date] for next-day delivery.") If not, add one to every listing today.
// prompt ideas
Rewrite my Etsy or Amazon listing description using the AIDA model. Here is my current description: [paste it]. My target buyer is [describe them]. Restructure the copy so the first sentence earns Attention, the second builds Interest, the middle section creates Desire with a specific outcome, and the final line delivers a clear Action. Keep it under [X] words.
Audit my sales page for [product name] against the four AIDA stages. Here's the page copy: [paste it]. Identify which stage each paragraph addresses, point out any stage that's missing or weak, and rewrite the weakest section. Pay special attention to the Desire stage — most creators skip it.
Help me write a Pinterest pin sequence for [product] using AIDA across four pins. Pin 1 stops the scroll (Attention). Pin 2 explains the concept (Interest). Pin 3 shows the transformation (Desire). Pin 4 drives to a landing page (Action). Give me the image concept, title, and description for each pin.