Marketing Hooks

Create compelling marketing hooks and content structures using the Puzzle-Driven Model. Use when creating social media posts, newsletters, video scripts, or any marketing content that needs to capture attention. Triggers include "write a hook", "create a title", "make this more engaging", "content structure", "wow factor", or when analyzing why content performs well.

Audits

Pending

Install

openclaw skills install marketing-hooks

Marketing Hooks - Puzzle-Driven Content Model

Create attention-grabbing marketing content using proven psychological frameworks.

Core Principle: Questions Drive Engagement

Good content is driven by good questions. Good questions are puzzles.

When your opening creates a puzzle, the audience's brain automatically tries to solve it. This creates engagement and retention.

Four Question Types

1. How-Type (Method)

Pattern: "How to [achieve desired outcome]?"

Examples:

  • "How to become wealthy quickly?"
  • "From white-label to brand?"
  • "How to start cross-border e-commerce?"
  • "How to 10x your productivity with AI?"

Best for: Tutorials, guides, practical content

2. Why-Type (Reason)

Pattern: "Why [surprising fact/outcome]?"

Examples:

  • "Why did they become CEO?"
  • "Why 90% of AI tools fail?"
  • "Why top creators don't post daily?"

Best for: Analysis, insights, thought leadership

3. What-Type (Definition)

Pattern: "What is [concept/term]?"

Examples:

  • "What is supply-side reform?"
  • "What is CPS?"
  • "What is Product-Market Fit?"

Best for: Educational content, explainers

4. WoW-Type (Extreme Case) ⭐ HIGHEST ENGAGEMENT

Pattern: Create probability-defying extreme cases

Core insight: WoW = Manufacturing extremely low-probability extreme cases

Formula:

  • Discover extremes → Get traffic
  • Become extreme → Build brand

Examples:

  • "Gen-Z makes $100K/month with AI"
  • "10K followers in 3 days - the secret"
  • "I replaced my entire team with one tool"
  • "This 19-year-old built a $1M business with ChatGPT"

Why it works: Brain automatically fills in missing logic, creating engagement stickiness.

Visual/Info/Case combinations:

  • Extreme visual + surprising data
  • Impossible timeline + real results
  • Tiny input + massive output

Content Tree Structure

Every piece of content should follow this hierarchy:

Question (Root)
    ↓
Viewpoint (Trunk)
    ↓
Reasoning (Branches)
    ↓
Evidence (Leaves)

Gan Method Content Model

Structure:

  1. Core viewpoint (Trunk)
  2. Sub-arguments (Branches)
  3. Evidence (Leaves) - Must be:
    • Unexpected
    • Memorable
    • Vivid

Quality check: A good 15-min video or well-evidenced article = a tree with lush branches and leaves.

Platform-Specific Applications

Xiaohongshu (Little Red Book)

Best formats:

  • WoW-type titles: "Gen-Z AI tools $100K/month"
  • How-type for tutorials: "5 AI tools for 10x efficiency"

Structure:

  1. Hook (5-10s): WoW statement
  2. Pain point (10-15s): "Are you also facing..."
  3. Solution (120-180s): Step-by-step with demos
  4. Results (20-30s): Proof
  5. CTA (5-10s): "Follow for more"

X (Twitter)

Best formats:

  • Start with puzzle: "Do you know why 90% of people fail with AI tools?"
  • Then reveal answer in thread

Structure:

  • Tweet 1: Puzzle/Hook
  • Tweet 2-4: Reasoning + Evidence
  • Final tweet: Conclusion + CTA

Newsletter

Best formats:

  • Question (title) → Viewpoint (intro) → Reasoning (body) → Evidence (examples)

Structure:

  • Subject line: WoW or Why-type
  • Opening: Establish puzzle
  • Body: Tree structure (trunk → branches → leaves)
  • Closing: Actionable takeaway

Hook Generation Workflow

When asked to create hooks:

  1. Identify the core message

    • What's the main point?
    • What outcome does the audience want?
  2. Choose question type

    • Practical guide? → How
    • Surprising insight? → Why
    • New concept? → What
    • Extreme case? → WoW (prioritize this!)
  3. Apply WoW amplification

    • Can you make it more extreme?
    • Can you add surprising numbers?
    • Can you create contrast (small input → big output)?
  4. Test the puzzle

    • Does it make you think "why?" or "how?"
    • Does it create information gap?
    • Would you click it?

Examples Library

See EXAMPLES.md for detailed case studies and templates.

Quality Checklist

Before finalizing content:

  • Does the opening create a puzzle?
  • Is there a clear tree structure (root → trunk → branches → leaves)?
  • Are the evidence points unexpected, memorable, and vivid?
  • For WoW-type: Is the case extreme enough?
  • Does it make the brain want to "fill in the gaps"?

References

  • "Writing is a Craft" - "Questions are the engine of articles"
  • Gan Method - Content tree structure
  • WoW Psychology - Extreme case engagement mechanics