Key points of making warning and reminder headlines:
First, list important information.
Warning questions belong to real questions and should be passed directly in the questions. You should tell everyone important information or introduce events that have had serious consequences and warn everyone.
For example:
This section will be closed for 9 months, please pay attention to detour! This article has published an upcoming fact, which will affect everyone's travel.
After enjoying a flower, a woman's eyesight drops to 0. 1 Be careful with this thing!
This article is about an event with serious consequences, the reason of which may hurt others.
Second, put forward clear requirements or suggestions.
Warning and reminder titles should have clear requirements or suggestions. That is to tell the audience what to do.
For example, the road section will be closed for 9 months, and the requirement given is to bypass.
The sudden drop in women's eyesight requires that they should be careful with this thing, but it only sells the facts. If you want to know the answer, you need to read the article.
Third, use imperative sentences
Imperative sentences are more important than declarative sentences, reminding the audience of what to do or not to do.
Since it is for the purpose of warning or reminding, imperative sentences should naturally be used in this title. The subject of imperative sentences is often omitted, and exclamation marks are usually used at the end of sentences.
However, some imperative sentences are just requests or suggestions. When the tone is weak, punctuation or commas can be used in the title.
Imperative sentences can be emphasized with ten million, certain, should and must. Or use "please" to indicate the request.
Problems needing attention:
First, the events involved should be true and authoritative.
If we ask or suggest others to do it, we are responsible for what we say, so we must ensure the authenticity and authority of the information. What about the published content? It is best to have official first-hand information. If the content involves real events, check its authenticity, otherwise the warning title will have sensational or confusing effects.
Especially warning documents, it is best to indicate the source of information in the copy.
Second, the expression of reminders should grasp the scale.
When issuing warnings or reminders, we usually do not support the use of titles with a strong sense of substitution.
For example, you have an induction cooker at home. Look, come on, it will explode!
It's best not to change it to: be careful, your induction cooker must not be like this, it will explode!
Although this hint of bad consequences has a better deterrent effect, it will make people feel uncomfortable.