24 Types Of Content Hooks For Social Media + 96 Examples
Anshul Jain ↗?
Building - The Luma | LinkedIn Growth Strategist | Film Video Editor | Helping Brands with Branding & Marketing Solutions | Open for paid Collaborations
The hook is the most important part of any piece of content. That’s because if it doesn’t work, readers won’t even read the rest of the words.
When you write content, you basically have to do two things. First, you sell the value of reading the rest of it. Then, you deliver value in the body. When you don't nail that subtle sales pitch at the start, you lose readers. A lot of them.
These are some hooks that I've seen work over and over again.
I'll give you 24 types with 4 examples of each. Let's get started...
1. Client/Customer/User Results
This is the same as the first one but instead of talking about your results, you talk about your clients, customers, users, etc. If you’re an email marketer, you could talk about a client’s Black Friday sale. If you run a social media marketing SaaS tool, you could talk about how many followers your users have gained.
Examples:
2. Personal Results
Sharing personal results does three things. First, it attracts attention in general. If you lose X pounds or make X amount of money, that makes people get interested. Second, that interest is in you, not anybody else. Content about Jeff Bezos or other successful people often goes viral, and it can be a part of your content strategy, but if you never talk about yourself, your results will suffer. Finally, it makes people trust you, which leads to followers, customers, and clients.
Examples:
3. Relevant Questions
People instinctively want to answer questions, and that’s especially true when the question is relevant to them and their desires. Asking one can be a solid hook.
Examples:
4. List Titles
Lists take up lots of space on the timeline, are easy to consume, and give readers a bunch of different ideas to agree with, disagree with, or get value from. They’re a staple of almost everybody’s content strategy. You can use their titles as hooks.
Examples:
5. How-To Starters
If you create useful content (as opposed to just entertaining), your followers want to get some sort of outcome. That could be writing better, getting healthier, investing better, etc. How-to guides help them do that, and they have super simple hooks. You can play it straight with a basic title, or you can add a little style with a longer one that adds more benefit or addresses an objection.
Examples:
6. Story Starters
People love story posts. You can hook them just by starting to tell the story. There are three ways to do that. First, you can start from the beginning (that’s the conventional method). Second, you can start from the middle or end (this is often more interesting than starting from the beginning). Third, you can summarize the story into one or two sentences. Whichever you choose, you can start from the beginning after that.
Examples:
7. If, Then
Starting with an “if” statement calls a certain kind of person out and makes them especially interested in the content. Then, the “then” statement leads them into the rest of the content.
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8. Steal This
People love the idea of “stealing” strategies, content, business models, etc. It makes them feel like they’re taking a shortcut, even if they’re really just getting inspiration from someone/something else.
Examples:
9. Statistics
People love statistics. I’m not totally sure why, but they just do. When you cite them, readers tend to pay attention. That’s especially true when the statistic is relevant to their interests.
Simple Example:
Examples:
10. Quickies With Keywords
These are hooks that are just two or three words long and use an alluring keyword. Some examples are “unpopular”, “unconventional”, “weird”, and “underrated”. Though many of these are somewhat overused, they still have a spot in your toolkit. Just make sure you don’t use them too frequently, and when you do, make sure you deliver on the promise of that word (e.g. if you say “unpopular opinion”, make it actually unpopular). You can also skip the alluring keyword and just play it straight. For example, rather than “weird copywriting tip:”, you could just write “copywriting tip:”.
Examples:
11. Get X Without Y
This is a classic one in the sales copy world, but it works for content too. Promising to help someone get something (X) they desire is appealing. Promising to help them do that without having to do something (Y) they don’t want to do makes it even more appealing.
Examples:
12. I Did The Hard Work
People don’t just want what they want. They also usually want it quickly, easily, and affordably. That’s why this hook is powerful. You tell them that you did the unappealing part, and they get more interested because they want to get the reward without doing the work.
Examples:
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13. Simple Descriptions
Sometimes, all you need to do is plainly describe what's coming next. No fancy strategies required. This is a broad category that can apply to any types of niche.
Examples:
14. Arguments
Unless your sole goal is to entertain, most pieces of content are somewhat of an argument. You're presenting why someone should think or act in a certain way. For this type of hook, you're explicitly arguing your point.
Examples:
15. Bold Claims
People love bold claims. They attract attention, create interest in the author, and make people want to read the rest of the content to see if you can back your bold claim up.
Examples:
16. Surprise
Most people consume tons of content every day. They see similar posts, one after the other, day after day, for years. That’s why surprising hooks often work well. They provide a pattern interrupt and make people interested.
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17. Pain
This is another classic sales copy one, but it works well for content too. If your brand is useful, you’re probably helping people solve a painful problem. Calling out that pain generates interest.
Examples:
18. Humor
We don’t need an explanation on this one. People like laughing, and if you can make them laugh, that makes for a great hook. I’ve seen these do especially well when they’re self-aware and somewhat of inside jokes with a certain niche.
No examples for this one. It's too hard to recreate humor, which is often more about tone than anything else.
19. Uniqueness
The best copywriters I know are obsessed with the term “USP”. That stands for “unique selling proposition”. Uniqueness attracts attention, followers, and customers. Do your best to find something unique about yourself and your offers, then use that uniqueness in hooks.
Examples:
20. Secrets
People like finding out secrets. I think the psychology is similar to “stealing” being appealing (we talked about that above). Hint at revealing a secret, and lots of people will pay attention.
Examples:
21. Give Me X & I’ll Give You Y
I see these all the time on Twitter and LinkedIn. The key is making the X small and the Y much bigger so people feel like they’re getting an awesome deal. You can make this a hook for a standard piece of content, or you can follow it up with some kind of giveaway.
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22. The One Thing
The idea that one thing is holding someone back or one thing is the key to their success is appealing. When you promise some kind of useful one thing, people pay attention.
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23. Hot Takes
Hot takes are similar to bold claims, but they cover every kind of semi-controversial thing you can say. These attract attention well, and they get people interested in the author, not just the content.
Examples:
24. Us Vs Them
People love drama, and "us vs them" persuasion creates it. Declare you and people like you as the in-group and others as the out-group. Then, lightly criticize them. This works well in copywriting and content writing.
Examples:
Bonus: Combinations
As you’ve probably seen from the examples above, you don’t have to choose just one of these. Often, the best hooks combine multiple hooking principles into one. For example, you might hook with a personal result, then lead your readers into the body of the content with a list title lead. The possibilities are endless, so I won’t try to go over all of them. I bet you’ll get good at blending these the more you write.
Conclusion
Even if you’re writing content and have no product or service to sell, you’re still selling, and you’re selling from the very first word you write. The beginning of your writing also called the “hook”, grabs attention and sells the value of reading the rest of the post.
Use these 24 types to make that happen. They've generated over 50 million views for me and my clients. If it worked for us, it'll work for you too whether you're on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Instagram, or any other platform.