January 20, 2026

Why 22 Beats 20 Every Time

R

ReliableReads Editorial Team

Prospect Match

Why 22 Beats 20 Every Time

 Give me 2 minutes and I’ll give you the sentence to use:

"Do you have 12 minutes for a call? The webinar will be 22 minutes."


Most marketers say they respect people’s time, but your audience can’t feel that respect unless your wording makes it believable. That’s why this line from The Marketing Millennials matters: "when you use a specific number, it signals you’re serious about the time you’re asking for." And right now 12 and 22 are good numbers to use.


Round numbers like 15 or 30 often sound like marketing labels instead of a real measurement. People have been trained by events that promises “quick” and then drifts off track, so a rounded time estimate can trigger skepticism before they even start.


Specific numbers like 12 or 22 feel different because they imply intention and discipline. Even if you don't literally time it, the number creates the perception that you edited, measured, and are respecting the time.


The point isn’t the number itself—it’s the respect behind it. A precise time promise subtly tells someone, “This has a point, it’s structured, and it won’t ramble.”

This matters even more in Q1, when audiences are overloaded and restarting routines. When attention is expensive, discipline becomes a trust signal, and trust is what earns the click.


So instead of saying something is a “quick read” or a “short video,” lead with a measured-sounding time expectation. Pair that time with a clear payoff so the reader knows exactly what they’re getting in return.

For example, “Give me 6 minutes and you’ll know what to do next,” feels more believable than “a quick 5–10 minute read.” “Watch the 2:40 clip,” feels more respectful than “watch this quick video.”


This only works if your content is what you committed to. If you claim it takes 6 minutes, it to be tight and the time has to be right on or the trust you gained at the start disappears by the end.


The larger strategy is specificity. Specificity builds credibility, credibility builds trust, and trust makes people more willing to give you their time.


If you want your content to earn attention faster especially this first quarter of the year, stop saying “quick” and start being specific. Your audience will feel the difference.

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