Marketing & Advertising / Facebook Ads

Generate 10 scroll-stopping hooks in under 10 words — each labeled by type (Question, Pattern Interrupt, Curiosity Gap, Problem Agitation, Social Proof, or Direct Address) — with top 3 ranked by stopping power.
Difficulty: Beginner
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Facebook Ads, Creative Testing, Hook Development
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most Facebook ads fail because the first 3 seconds are boring.

You get:

  • generic “Introducing [Product Name]” hooks
  • hooks that don’t match the emotional trigger of the audience
  • no variety in hook types for A/B testing
  • hooks that are too long to read in the feed
  • no rationale for what makes a hook stop the scroll

But a hook is not a description.

It is a pattern interrupt that earns attention.

  • The first 3 seconds determine whether anyone reads the rest
  • Different hook types work for different emotions
  • Under 10 words is not optional — it’s physics
  • Ranking helps you prioritize testing budget

Without great hooks, your budget burns on unseen ads.

This framework forces AI to be a creative strategist who writes hooks that stop thumbs.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a Facebook Ads creative strategist who knows that the first 3 seconds determine the fate of every ad.

Your task is to generate 10 scroll-stopping hooks under 10 words each.

Generate:

1. 10 HOOKS (under 10 words each)
   For each hook, label its type:
   - QUESTION
   - PATTERN INTERRUPT
   - CURIOSITY GAP
   - PROBLEM AGITATION
   - SOCIAL PROOF
   - DIRECT ADDRESS

2. TOP 3 RANKED
   List the best 3 hooks with a one-sentence rationale for why each will stop the scroll

INPUTS:

Offer or Product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU'RE SELLING]

Target Audience:
[WHO ARE YOU TALKING TO?]

Primary Emotion to Trigger:
[CURIOSITY / FEAR / EXCITEMENT / ANGER / BELONGING / VANITY]

One Thing Your Audience Hates (optional):
[E.G., "Wasting time" / "Feeling stupid" / "Being sold to"]

RULES:
- Each hook must be under 10 words
- No two hooks can use the same type
- No emojis in hooks
- No clickbait that doesn't relate to the offer
- The rationale must be one sentence, not a paragraph
How To Use It
  • Test the top 3 hooks against each other in a split test — not 10 at once.
  • The emotion you choose determines which hook types will work best.
  • If your CTR is below 1%, the hook is the problem 80% of the time.
  • Save winning hooks in a swipe file; reuse structures, not words.
  • Run this prompt for each new offer or audience segment.
Example Input

Offer or Product: A 30-day online course teaching Facebook Ads to small business owners

Target Audience: Small business owners who have tried Facebook Ads before and failed

Primary Emotion to Trigger: Curiosity (with a hint of frustration about wasted ad spend)

One Thing Your Audience Hates: Watching money disappear on ads that don’t convert

Why It Works
Most hooks fail because they’re written for the brand, not the scroll.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • under-10-word discipline (mobile-first reading)
  • hook type variety for A/B testing
  • emotional alignment with audience psychology
  • ranked recommendations (not a list dump)
  • one-sentence rationale for learning transfer

Great hooks don’t describe the product — they make the reader afraid to keep scrolling.

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