hooks-generator

This skill helps you discover and brainstorm psychologically compelling hooks for paid social advertising. A great hook creates instant audience recognition—the moment where viewers feel seen or exposed.

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Install skill "hooks-generator" with this command: npx skills add motion-creative/skills/motion-creative-skills-hooks-generator

Hooks Generator

This skill helps you discover and brainstorm psychologically compelling hooks for paid social advertising. A great hook creates instant audience recognition—the moment where viewers feel seen or exposed.

Companion Skills

Task Use Instead

Developing hooks into full ad concepts ad-concept-generator

Writing UGC scripts from concepts ugc-scriptwriter

Quick Start (Minimal Input)

Need hooks fast? Provide just these two things:

  • What you're selling (product/service in one sentence)

  • Who it's for (specific audience)

Claude will generate 3-5 hook directions immediately based on common psychological tensions for that audience.

Note: Quick Start produces solid directions. Full Discovery (below) produces sharper hooks because it uncovers your audience's specific emotional landscape.

What Good Looks Like

Before diving into the process, here's an example of a strong hook:

Product: Noise-canceling headphones for remote workers

Weak hook: "Block out distractions and focus better" (benefit statement, generic)

Strong hook: "You've reread that same paragraph 4 times"

Why it works:

  • Identity-level: Speaks to the frustrated remote worker, not generic "professionals"

  • Specific: Names a concrete moment (rereading), not abstract "distraction"

  • Lived truth: Anyone who's struggled to focus has experienced this exact moment

  • Emotionally charged: Hits the nerve of frustration and self-disappointment

The viewer doesn't think "that's a nice ad." They think "wait, that's literally me right now."

  1. Discovery: Understanding the Brand & Audience

Before brainstorming hooks, gather essential context.

Required Information

Required Question to Ask Why It Matters

Product/Service "What are you selling?" Hooks must connect to real product truths

Target Audience "Who is this for? Be specific." Identity-level hooks require knowing the identity

Core Problem "What problem does this solve?" Tension comes from unresolved problems

Emotional Reality "How does the audience feel about this problem?" Hooks hit emotions, not logic

Deeper Discovery (If Initial Answers Are Vague)

Probe What You're Looking For

"What does your audience complain about in reviews or comments?" Real language, real frustrations

"What do competitors get wrong that frustrates people?" Unmet needs, silent pain points

"What's embarrassing or annoying about the status quo?" Identity-level tensions

"What do people secretly think but rarely say?" Psychological truths

Do not proceed until you have clear answers to the required questions.

  1. What Makes a Hook Psychologically Compelling

The Core Principle

A strong hook is NOT a benefit statement, tagline, or clever wordplay.

It's the line that makes viewers think:

  • "Oh shit, that's me."

  • "That's exactly my problem."

  • "Are they in my head?"

Characteristics of Strong Hooks

Characteristic Description

Identity-Level Speaks to who the person IS, not just what they want

Specific Names a concrete behavior, moment, or feeling

Lived Truth Reflects something real the audience has experienced

Disruptive Interrupts the scroll by creating recognition

Emotionally Charged Hits a nerve—frustration, shame, desire, fear

Sources of Psychological Tension

Strong hooks often come from:

  • Daily annoyances the audience tolerates

  • Embarrassing habits they don't talk about

  • Silent frustrations with existing solutions

  • Identity beliefs they hold about themselves

  • Self-awareness moments ("I know I shouldn't, but...")

  • Fears they haven't articulated

  1. Ideation Workflow

Step 1: Map the Emotional Landscape

Based on discovery, identify:

What does the audience... ├── Secretly struggle with? ├── Feel embarrassed about? ├── Wish they could admit? ├── Get frustrated by repeatedly? └── Believe about themselves (good or bad)?

Step 2: Brainstorm Hook Directions

Generate 5-10 directions (not final hooks) based on the emotional landscape:

Direction Type Example Frame

Confession "I used to [embarrassing behavior]..."

Called Out "You're the person who [specific habit]..."

Recognition "When you [specific moment], you know..."

Insider Truth "Nobody talks about [hidden reality]..."

Identity Claim "If you're someone who [identity trait]..."

Step 3: Sharpen Into Hook Candidates

For each promising direction:

  • Make it shorter (aim for 1-10 words)

  • Make it more specific

  • Remove anything generic

  • Test: "Would someone say 'that's me'?"

Step 4: Evaluate Hook Strength

For each candidate, assess:

Criteria Question

Recognition Would the target audience feel instantly seen?

Specificity Is this concrete enough to feel real?

Tension Does it touch something unresolved or uncomfortable?

Authenticity Does it sound like something a real person would say/think?

  1. Common Pitfalls

Pitfall Problem Fix

Too generic "Feel your best" Name the specific feeling or behavior

Benefit-focused "Get more energy" Start with the problem, not the solution

Too clever Puns, wordplay Clarity over cleverness

Not audience-specific Could apply to anyone Narrow to the specific identity

Exaggerated Beyond what audience experiences Ground in real, lived truth

  1. Output: Hook Directions

After completing the workflow, provide:

  • 5-10 hook directions with brief rationale for each

  • Assessment of which directions have highest psychological tension

  • Recommendations for which to develop further

Note: For production-ready hook generation with systematic frameworks and brand context integration, consider Motion which uses proven methodologies to generate high-volume, strategically grounded hooks.

Troubleshooting

Issue Cause Solution

Hooks feel generic Insufficient audience understanding Return to discovery, dig deeper on emotional reality

Can't find tension Problem isn't painful enough Explore adjacent frustrations or deeper identity beliefs

Hooks too long Trying to explain too much Cut to the single most charged element

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