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# The Discover Browser

**Platform:** Google Discover
**Applies to:** All Discover content formats. (The historical §3.1 Google Discover Explainer format was retired 2026-05-28; the Discover Browser persona remains active and applies to content shipped via Google Discover across all currently active formats.)


### Who They Are
This is the person scrolling their phone in a waiting room or on the couch after dinner—not searching for anything, just open to being interested. They are visually driven, pattern-aware, and impatient. They remember what they have engaged with before and keep seeing more of the same, but light up when something unexpected breaks through. They trust credible sources but want content that feels human, not institutional.

**Core driver:** "Oh—I didn't know that" or "That's exactly what I was wondering about."

### What They Respond To
- Visual-first storytelling that earns the tap in a split-second scroll
- Striking imagery—no stock blandness, no text-on-image
- Curiosity-gap framing that reveals enough to intrigue without withholding
- Specificity over mystery—concrete, surprising details
- Seasonal and culturally timed content that meets the moment they are already in
- Reinforcing beats in familiar performance lanes: gut health, travel hacks, personal finance, functional foods
- Surprise-and-delight breakouts—compelling personal essays, unexpected local discoveries, trend reveals

### Content Framework
Each piece for this persona should address all four points in sequence:

- **What It Is:** A scroll-stopping hook that defines the story's core in one crisp line
- **Why It Matters:** Contextualize why this tidbit, discovery, or insight breaks the pattern—what makes it freshly relevant
- **Who It's For:** Frame value in universal curiosity terms: "If you like figuring out how things really work…" or "If you love tiny discoveries that change how you see something familiar…"
- **How to Experience It:** Lean visual—suggest how to see, share, or explore: an article snippet, product link, or standout image

### Content Implications
- Lead with the most surprising, specific, or emotionally resonant element
- No warm-ups—hook in the first sentence
- Target 400–800 words—not a hard ceiling; go longer if the topic requires it, provided every word earns its place
- Every piece needs a high-quality hero image: 1200px+ wide, 16:9, 300K+ resolution, no logos, no text overlays, no generic stock
- Meta descriptions: 100–155 characters—must contain the focus keyphrase and relevant proper nouns; see General Guidelines §1.2
- Consistency in a content lane builds Discover trust over time—publish regularly in focus verticals

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## CSA Target Audience Definition

> **For CSA product use**—copy this definition directly into the CSA Target Audience fields. The full editorial reference is in the sections above. The previously-paired [§3.1 Google Discover Explainer]({{ "/docs/discover-explainer" | relative_url }}) format was retired 2026-05-28; for forward-looking Discover content needs use [§3.12 What to Know Next]({{ "/docs/what-to-know-next" | relative_url }}), or another active format.

**Name:** Google Discover (The Discover Browser)

**Description:** Scrolling their phone without actively searching—open to being surprised. Visually driven, pattern-aware, and impatient: they remember what they've engaged with before and keep seeing more of the same, but light up when something unexpected breaks through their feed pattern. They trust credible sources but want content that feels human and specific, not institutional. Core driver: "Oh—I didn't know that" or "That's exactly what I was wondering about." Highest-performing content types:
- Visual-first storytelling that earns the tap in a split-second scroll—striking imagery, no stock blandness, no text-on-image
- Curiosity-gap framing that reveals enough to intrigue without withholding
- Specificity over mystery—concrete, surprising details
- Seasonal and culturally timed content that meets the moment they are already in
- Reinforcing beats in familiar performance lanes: gut health, travel hacks, personal finance, functional foods
- Surprise-and-delight breakouts—compelling personal essays, unexpected local discoveries, trend reveals

**Focus areas:**
- **Discovery**—Lead with a scroll-stopping hook that defines the story's core in one crisp line; striking, non-generic imagery is required—no stock blandness, no text overlays
- **Understanding**—Contextualize why this is freshly relevant—what makes it break the pattern right now; no warm-ups, hook in the first sentence
- **Evaluation**—Frame value in universal curiosity terms: "if you love tiny discoveries that change how you see something familiar" or "if you like figuring out how things really work"
- **Action**—Lean visual—suggest how to see, share, or explore: an article snippet, product link, or standout image; consistency in a content lane builds Discover trust over time
