hooks.md 6.1 KB

Writing Compelling Hooks

Techniques for creating attention-grabbing openings that make people want to keep reading, watching, or listening.


Why Hooks Matter

First 3 seconds are critical:

  • 80% of people decide to continue or leave within 3 seconds
  • Hooks determine whether your content gets consumed or ignored
  • Strong hooks increase engagement, shares, and conversions

Hook Types

1. Question Hook

Ask a question that resonates with your audience's pain points or desires.

Examples:

  • "Ever wonder why some content goes viral while yours gets ignored?"
  • "What if I told you there's a better way to write hooks?"
  • "Are you making these 3 fatal mistakes in your content?"

Best for: Blog posts, emails, social media


2. Statistic Hook

Lead with a surprising or compelling statistic.

Examples:

  • "95% of content gets zero engagement. Here's why."
  • "The average person scrolls past 300 posts per day. Here's how to stop them."
  • "I analyzed 10,000 viral posts. Here's what they all had in common."

Best for: Data-driven content, credibility building


3. Story Hook

Start with a relatable story or scenario.

Examples:

  • "I spent 6 months creating content that nobody read. Then I changed one thing..."
  • "Picture this: You hit publish on your best work yet. Crickets."
  • "Three years ago, I was exactly where you are now..."

Best for: Personal content, case studies, testimonials


4. Bold Claim Hook

Make a provocative or counterintuitive statement.

Examples:

  • "Everything you know about content marketing is wrong."
  • "You don't need more content. You need better hooks."
  • "The secret to viral content has nothing to do with quality."

Best for: Thought leadership, contrarian takes, attention-grabbing


5. Problem-Agitation Hook

Identify a problem and agitate it before offering a solution.

Examples:

  • "Your content is invisible. Not because it's bad, but because nobody sees it."
  • "You're working twice as hard and getting half the results. Sound familiar?"
  • "Every day you wait, your competitors are stealing your audience."

Best for: Sales copy, problem-solution content


6. Curiosity Gap Hook

Create intrigue by hinting at valuable information without revealing it.

Examples:

  • "The one thing nobody tells you about content creation..."
  • "I discovered something that changed everything. Here's what happened."
  • "There's a hidden pattern in all viral content. Once you see it, you can't unsee it."

Best for: Clickable content, social media, email subject lines


First Sentence Formulas

Formula 1: Problem + Promise

"[Problem] is killing your results. Here's how to fix it."

Formula 2: Surprising Fact + Explanation

"[Surprising fact]. Here's why it matters."

Formula 3: Personal Story + Lesson

"I [did something]. Here's what I learned."

Formula 4: Question + Answer Preview

"[Question]? The answer might surprise you."

Formula 5: Bold Statement + Proof

"[Bold claim]. Here's the data to prove it."


Opening Patterns by Format

Blog Posts

  • Start with a question or statistic
  • Use 1-2 sentence paragraphs for easy scanning
  • Promise value in the first 50 words

Videos

  • Visual hook in first 3 seconds (movement, text, face)
  • Verbal hook in first 5 seconds
  • Pattern interrupt (unexpected sound, visual, statement)

Social Media Posts

  • Hook in first line (before "see more")
  • Use line breaks to create curiosity
  • Emoji or formatting to stand out

Emails

  • Subject line = hook
  • First sentence reinforces the hook
  • Preview text extends the curiosity

Podcasts

  • Tease the most valuable insight upfront
  • Use a story or surprising fact
  • Promise a clear takeaway

Attention Retention Techniques

Open Loops

Create questions or promises early that you answer later.

Example: "I'll share the exact framework at the end, but first..."

Pattern Interrupts

Break expected patterns to recapture attention.

Examples:

  • Sudden format change
  • Unexpected question
  • Contrarian statement
  • Personal aside

Value Stacking

Continuously promise and deliver value throughout.

Example: "Not only will you learn X, but I'll also show you Y and Z."

Micro-Commitments

Get small agreements that lead to continued engagement.

Example: "If you've ever felt this way, keep reading..."


Hook Testing Checklist

Before publishing, ask:

  • Does it grab attention in the first 3 seconds?
  • Does it create curiosity or promise value?
  • Is it relevant to my target audience?
  • Does it align with the content that follows?
  • Would I stop scrolling for this?
  • Is it specific rather than generic?
  • Does it trigger an emotional response?

Common Hook Mistakes

❌ Too Generic

"In this post, I'll talk about content creation."

✅ Specific and Compelling

"The 3-second rule that determines if your content lives or dies."


❌ Burying the Lead

Starting with background info instead of the hook.

✅ Lead with Value

Put the most compelling information first.


❌ Overpromising

Making claims you can't deliver on.

✅ Honest Value

Promise what you can actually deliver.


Hook Templates

For How-To Content

  • "How to [achieve desired outcome] without [common obstacle]"
  • "The [number]-step process to [desired result]"
  • "[Desired outcome] in [timeframe]: Here's how"

For List Content

  • "[Number] [things] that [result]"
  • "I tried [number] [things]. Here's what worked."
  • "The only [number] [things] you need to [result]"

For Case Studies

  • "How I [achieved result] in [timeframe]"
  • "From [starting point] to [end point]: The full story"
  • "[Result] without [expected requirement]: Here's how"

For Opinion/Thought Leadership

  • "Why [common belief] is wrong"
  • "The truth about [topic] nobody talks about"
  • "[Controversial take] and why it matters"

Usage

Apply these hook techniques to:

  • Blog post openings
  • Video intros
  • Social media posts
  • Email subject lines and openings
  • Podcast intros
  • Landing page headlines

Remember: The hook's job is to get people to consume the next sentence, not to tell the whole story.