hook-and-headline-writing
npx skills add https://github.com/cdeistopened/skill-stack --skill hook-and-headline-writing
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Skill 文档
Hook and Headline Writer
Create hooks and headlines that stop the scroll and compel action using systematic frameworks, not guesswork.
Purpose
80% of content performance comes from the hook. This skill provides the frameworks to craft headlines that capture attention and drive engagement – for any industry, any platform, any content type.
Core Philosophy: Generate volume (10+ options), then select best using proven criteria. The first option is rarely the best option.
When to Use This Skill
- Writing newsletter subject lines that get opens
- Crafting social media thread hooks that stop the scroll
- Creating LinkedIn post first lines that compel “see more”
- Optimizing headlines for blog posts or articles
- Generating multiple hook variations for A/B testing
Pairs well with: anti-ai-writing (for humanizing headlines), voice style skills (for brand-specific tone)
Key Principles
The 3-Sentence Rule for Social Hooks
- Maximum 3 sentences for social media hooks
- First sentence MUST be short
- Each sentence’s goal: get reader to the next
The 25% Rule
How to allocate time on any content:
- 25% ideation (identifying what to say)
- 25% hook/headline (crafting how to say it)
- 50% body content
Volume â Selection
- Generate 10+ variations minimum
- Select best using systematic criteria (not gut feel)
- The first option is rarely the best option
Story = Problem + Goal + Path
This equation equals value. Use it to identify what transformation your hook promises.
The 3-Phase Workflow
Phase 1: Generate Hook Ideas (Ideation)
Goal: Identify the core benefit, transformation, or insight your hook will promise
Step 1: Use the “Start Questioning” Method
Ask who/what/where/when/why/how about your topic. Then dig deeper by asking multiple times on the same answer.
Example:
- Topic: Productivity systems
- What? “What is the system?” â Time-blocking with deep work periods
- Why? “Why does it work?” â Eliminates context switching
- Why (deeper)? “Why does that matter?” â You get 3x output in half the time
- How? “How do people fail at this?” â They schedule too many blocks
- Impact angle discovered: “The counterintuitive key to time-blocking: schedule LESS”
Quality Check:
- Asked who/what/where/when/why/how
- Dug deeper at least 2-3 times on promising angles
- Identified a specific, impactful aspect (not just surface-level info)
Step 2: Identify the Transformation
Use the Story = Problem + Goal + Path framework:
- Problem: What struggle/pain does the audience face?
- Goal: What result do they want?
- Path: What’s the journey between them?
Example:
- Problem: Knowledge workers feel busy but unproductive
- Goal: Get meaningful work done and leave on time
- Path: Discover the 3-block system that eliminates busywork
Your hook should promise movement along this path.
Step 3: Identify Headline Elements
Extract these 6 elements from your content:
- Problem – What pain/struggle exists?
- Goal – What result does reader want?
- Benefit – What will their life look like after?
- Concept – What idea/principle applies?
- Example – What story/data illustrates this?
- Process – What steps lead to the result?
You’ll combine these in Phase 2 to generate variations.
Step 4: “Become the Reader” Check
Before moving to Phase 2, review from audience perspective:
- Ask: “What’s in it for me?”
- Check: Is this too abstract? (If you can’t picture it, neither can they)
- Verify: Would I stop scrolling for this?
Phase 2: Select Hook Type & Formula
Goal: Match your idea to proven frameworks that amplify it best
The Headline Element Combination System
Combine 2 of the 6 elements to create headline structure:
| Combination | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Problem + Process | “How to [Solve Problem] in [Steps]” | “How to Overcome Writer’s Block in 5 Steps” |
| Benefit + Timeframe | “[Achieve Benefit] in [Time]” | “Double Your Productivity in 30 Days” |
| Concept + Target Audience | “[Concept] for [Specific People]” | “Minimalism for Busy Professionals” |
| Goal + Benefit | “[Achieve Goal] to [Get Benefit]” | “Build an Audience to Earn Money While You Sleep” |
| Example + Process | “[Specific Result] using [Method]” | “How I Hit 100K Followers Using 3 Simple Rules” |
| Problem + Benefit | “Stop [Problem] and Start [Benefit]” | “Stop Trading Time for Money and Start Building Passive Income” |
How to use:
- Review your 6 elements from Phase 1
- Try 5-10 different combinations
- Select 2-3 that feel most powerful for your concept
Hook Type Selection
Choose the hook type that best matches your content goal:
1. Curiosity Hooks (create information gap)
- State what and why, leave out how
- State start and end, leave out middle
- Make bold claim, leave out data/proof
Examples:
- “I turned 33 today. I weighed in at 337lbs this week. Here’s what happened and how I’ll lose 140lbs in the next 18 months:”
- “10 years in SEO. Here’s what every new marketer should know:”
2. Transformation Hooks (show before â after)
- Personal transformation stories
- Skill development timelines
- Business/financial progress
Formula: “[Before State] â [After State]. Here’s how:”
Examples:
- “100 followers when I started. Last week, hit 10k. Here’s how I did it:”
- “I quit my 9-5 in 6 months. The key? Mastering one high-income skill.”
3. Authority Hooks (leverage expertise/results)
- Share years of experience
- Highlight specific achievements
- Borrow authority from others
Formula: “[Credentials/Results]. Here’s what [audience] should know:”
Examples:
- “I’ve built and sold 3 startups. Here are 17 learnings for your entrepreneurial journey:”
- “I coached 12 clients to $40,000/month. If you want to hit $10K/month, read this:”
4. Problem Callout Hooks (identify pain immediately)
- Name the specific struggle
- Call out the mistake/gap
- Challenge common practice
Formula: “Are you making these [number] [topic] mistakes?”
Examples:
- “98.9% of people are still unaware of ChatGPT’s full potential. Here are 10 advanced prompts:”
- “The costly mistake 90% of writers make”
5. Target Callout Hooks (speak directly to specific audience)
- Name the audience explicitly
- Address their specific context
Formula: “[Audience name]… [Action/insight they need]”
Examples:
- “Digital Writers… Stop committing these 4 headline mistakes”
- “Attention Founders: Your landing page is costing you customers”
6. Bold Claim Hooks (pattern interrupt)
- Make counterintuitive statement
- Challenge conventional wisdom
- Present surprising data
Formula: “[Surprising/controversial claim]. Here’s why:”
Examples:
- “AI will create millionaires. Here’s how you can be part of it:”
- “Forget everything you know about headline writing”
Apply Sticky Sentence Techniques
Enhance your hook using these literary devices:
Alliteration – Same starting sounds
- “Specificity is the secret”
- “The best jobs are neither decreed nor degreed”
Symmetry – Parallel structure
- “Read for awareness. Write for understanding.”
- “It’s not 10,000 hours. It’s 10,000 iterations.”
Contrast – Opposing ideas
- “To be everywhere is to be nowhere”
- “Be clear, not clever. Concise, not complex.”
Rhyme – Similar ending sounds
- “Tell a story or lose your glory”
Rhythm – Pleasing cadence
- “When you can’t wait to share it, they can’t help but read it”
Combining techniques: For maximum stickiness, combine multiple
- “Anger prepares us to fight. Fear prepares us to flee.” (Symmetry + Alliteration)
See references/sticky-sentence-techniques.md for detailed examples.
15 Proven Headline Formulas
- How-to: “How to [Achieve Result] in [Timeframe]”
- List: “[Number] Ways to [Achieve Goal]”
- Question: “Are You Making These [Number] Mistakes?”
- Curiosity-gap: “The Surprising Truth About [Topic]”
- Benefit-driven: “[Do This] to [Get Benefit]”
- Authority Secret: “[Expert’s] Secret to [Result]”
- Without Formula: “Do [Great Thing] without [Thing They Hate]”
- Weird Trick: “1 Weird Trick for [Result] with [Topic]”
- Quick and Easy: “A Quick and Easy Way to [Solve Problem]”
- The Art Of: “The Art of [Topic]”
- X Ways to Ruin: “[Number] Ways to Ruin [Topic]”
- Name Your Reader: “[Reader Type] + [Topic]”
- Teaser Introduction: “[Number] proven strategies to [result]: (thread)”
- Essential Knowledge: “[Number] tools every [profession] should know”
- Time-Saving Experience: “I’ve tested [number]+ [things]. Save yourself [time] with these top picks”
See references/headline-formulas-library.md for full examples.
Phase 3: Optimize & Select Best
Goal: Generate 10+ variations and select the best using systematic criteria
Step 1: Generate Volume (10+ Variations)
Using different combinations from Phase 2:
- Try 3-4 different hook types
- Apply 2-3 different headline formulas
- Test with/without sticky sentence techniques
- Vary element combinations
Minimum output: 10 hook variations
Example for “Productivity System” content:
- “I wasted 3 years on productivity hacks. Then I found the one that actually works.”
- “Why the most productive people schedule LESS (not more)”
- “10 years optimizing workflows. Here’s what every knowledge worker should know:”
- “The 3-block system: How I 3x’d my output while working fewer hours”
- “Are you making these 3 time-blocking mistakes? (Most people make #2)”
- “From 12-hour days to leaving at 5pm. Here’s what changed:”
- “The counterintuitive productivity hack: do less, achieve more”
- “Knowledge workers: Stop trying to be busy. Start trying to be effective.”
- “I’ve tested 50+ productivity systems. Save yourself 3 years with these findings:”
- “Forget time management. The best workers manage energy instead.”
Step 2: Apply the 10 Commandments of Engagement
Optimize your top 5-7 variations using this checklist:
-
Numbers and Statistics
- Uses specific numbers (not “many” or “several”)
- Includes percentages, dollar amounts, or timeframes
-
Negativity Bias
- Highlights potential loss or mistake
- Warns of consequences
-
Pattern Interrupt
- Challenges common belief
- Surprises or contradicts expectations
-
Target Callout
- Directly addresses specific audience
- Names them explicitly when appropriate
-
Problem Callout
- Identifies common pain point immediately
- Names the struggle specifically
-
Confidence and Conviction
- Uses strong, assertive language
- Eliminates hedge words (maybe, might, could)
-
Aesthetics
- Visually clean and scannable
- Line breaks in right places
-
Potential Benefit
- Clearly states what reader will gain
- Focuses on outcome, not just process
-
Social Proof
- Leverages authority or popularity when relevant
- References results, credentials, or validation
-
Warning and Caution
- Creates urgency or importance
- Suggests reader might be missing out
Aim for 4-6 commandments per hook for strong performance.
Step 3: Test with The 4 U’s
Evaluate your top 3-5 options:
- Useful – Does it offer clear value?
- Urgent – Does it compel immediate action/attention?
- Unique – Does it stand out from similar content?
- Ultra-specific – Is it concrete (not vague)?
Example of all 4 U’s working: “7 Little-Known SEO Tricks to Boost Your Traffic by 204% in Just 30 Days”
- â Useful: SEO tricks that boost traffic
- â Urgent: “Just 30 days” creates timeframe
- â Unique: “Little-known” implies non-obvious
- â Ultra-specific: “204%” and “7 tricks” are concrete
Quality threshold: Score 3/4 or 4/4 on the U’s.
Step 4: Final Selection Using Anatomy Criteria
Rate each finalist 1-5 on:
- Clarity – Main point immediately clear?
- Specificity – Concrete information or promise?
- Urgency – Compels immediate action/interest?
- Uniqueness – Stands out from competitors?
- Relevance – Aligns with target audience’s interests?
Minimum passing score: 20/25 total Aim for: 22-25/25 for high performance
Step 5: “Become the Reader” Final Check
Before finalizing:
- “What’s in it for me?” – Is the benefit crystal clear?
- Too abstract? – Can I picture what this promises?
- Would I stop scrolling? – Honest answer
- Does it make sense standalone? – Or does it need more context?
Output Format
For Newsletter Subject Lines
# Newsletter Subject Line Options - [Date]
## Source Content Summary
[1-2 sentence summary]
## Core Transformation
- Problem: [...]
- Goal: [...]
- Path: [...]
## Generated Variations (10 total)
### OPTION 1: [Hook Type]
**Subject Line:** [The subject line]
**Framework:** [Formula used]
**4 U's Score:** Useful â
| Urgent â
| Unique â
| Ultra-specific â
**Commandments Applied:** [List 4-6]
[Continue through 10 options]
## TOP 3 RECOMMENDED
[Selection with rationale]
For Social Media Thread Hooks
# Thread Hook Options - [Topic]
## Hook Variations (10 total)
**OPTION 1:**
[Hook text - max 3 sentences]
**Framework:** [Template used]
**Type:** [Curiosity/Transformation/Authority/etc]
**4 U's:** [Score]
[Continue for all 10]
## SELECTED HOOK:
[Final choice with rationale]
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Ideation Issues
â Surface-level questioning – Stopping at first “why” â Too abstract – Can’t visualize what you’re promising â Missing transformation – No clear before â after
Formula Issues
â First-match bias – Using first formula that fits â Formula drift – Abandoning structure mid-hook â Overcomplication – Trying to say too much
Optimization Issues
â Skipping volume – Writing 2-3 instead of 10+ â Hedge words – “Maybe,” “might,” “could” (kills conviction) â Generic promises – “Boost productivity” vs “Double your output in 30 days”
Selection Issues
â Gut-based selection – Picking favorite without criteria â Ignoring reader perspective – Benefit unclear â Clickbait – Promise you can’t fulfill (destroys trust)
Success Metrics
A successful hook/headline:
â Passes 4 U’s test – 3/4 minimum â Applies 4-6 Commandments â Scores 20+ on Anatomy (Clarity, Specificity, Urgency, Uniqueness, Relevance) â Survives “Become the Reader” test â Uses proven formula â Generated from volume – Selected from 10+ options
Power Words Quick Reference
Buzz Words: Hacks, shifts, tips, tricks, simple, new, small, tiny, insanely, profound, definitive, commandments, profitable, dreamy, subtle, destiny
Emotional Triggers: Weird, unusual, unique, crucial, bulletproof, exclusive, secret, little-known, unfair advantage, dirty little, dark secrets, outrageous, strange, scarce
Powerful Phrases:
- “… that changed my life”
- “The truth about…”
- “… don’t want you to know”
- “(backed by science)”
- “(you’ll thank me later)”
- “I regret…”
- “(for intelligent people)”
- “This is what I’d do:”
- “… in [time frame]”
- “(not joking)”
See references/power-words-library.md for full library.
Bundled Resources
Template Libraries
references/headline-formulas-library.md– All 15 formulas with examplesreferences/thread-hook-templates.md– 20+ social media thread openersreferences/sticky-sentence-techniques.md– Literary devices with examples
Optimization Tools
references/10-commandments-checklist.md– Detailed commandment explanationsreferences/power-words-library.md– Emotional triggers and phrases
Related Skills
- anti-ai-writing – Humanize headlines that sound too polished
- social-content-creation – Apply headlines to platform-optimized posts
- voice-[style] – Match headlines to specific brand voice
Spend 25% of your content creation time on headlines. Generate 10+ options. Select using criteria, not gut. The hook determines 80% of your content’s success.