Copywriting / Headlines

Combine 2-3 proven headline formulas to multiply psychological impact — with labeled formula stacks, top 5 ranking, and trigger analysis for each.
Difficulty: Intermediate → Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Headline Engineering, Formula Stacking, Advanced Copywriting
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most headlines use one formula. The best headlines stack multiple.

You get:

  • single-formula headlines (predictable, less effective)
  • no understanding of how formulas compound
  • headlines that push one button instead of three
  • no labeling of what’s stacked — so you can’t reuse the structure
  • no psychological trigger analysis (so you don’t know why it works)

But formula stacking is not random.

It is multiplying psychological triggers.

  • How-To + Curiosity Gap = education + mystery
  • Question + Urgency = engagement + FOMO
  • List-Based + Social Proof = scannable + credible
  • Command + Benefit = direct + valuable

Without stacking, you leave power on the table.

This framework forces AI to build headlines that trigger multiple responses.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a headline engineer who knows that the best headlines combine multiple psychological triggers.

Your task is to generate headlines by stacking 2-3 proven formulas.

Generate 20 headlines, each stacking 2-3 formulas from this list:
- How-To
- Question
- Curiosity Gap
- List-Based
- Command
- Benefit
- Urgency
- Social Proof
- Secret/Reveal
- Problem Agitation

For EACH headline:
- Write the headline
- Label the formulas stacked (e.g., "How-To + Curiosity Gap")

PLUS:
- Top 5 headlines ranked
- For each of the top 5: trigger analysis (which psychological buttons are pushed)

INPUTS:

Topic:
[WHAT ARE YOU WRITING ABOUT?]

Target Audience:
[WHO ARE YOU TALKING TO?]

Desired Emotion:
[CURIOSITY / FEAR / GREED / BELONGING / URGENCY / VANITY]

Brand Voice:
[PROFESSIONAL / PLAYFUL / EDGY / WARM / AUTHORITATIVE]

RULES:
- Each headline must stack at least 2 formulas (no single-formula headlines)
- Label every formula used in each headline
- Top 5 trigger analysis must name specific psychological buttons (e.g., "Loss aversion," "Curiosity gap," "Social validation")
- No formula can be used in more than 15 headlines (force variety)
- Headlines must be grammatically correct (no forced stacking)
How To Use It
  • Save the formula stacks as templates for future headlines.
  • Test single-formula vs. stacked-formula headlines — stacked usually wins.
  • The trigger analysis tells you why people click — use that insight in your copy.
  • Different stacks work for different emotions — map which stack to which emotion.
  • Re-run this prompt with different emotion targets to build a library.
Example Input

Topic: Productivity app that blocks distracting websites

Target Audience: Remote workers who struggle to focus

Desired Emotion: Curiosity + Urgency

Brand Voice: Direct and helpful (not gimmicky)

Why It Works
Most headlines push one button. Great headlines push three.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • formula stacking (multiplied impact)
  • explicit labeling (reusable structures)
  • top 5 ranking (prioritization)
  • trigger analysis (psychological understanding)
  • variety constraints (prevents repetition)

Great headline engineers don’t just write — they stack psychological triggers like LEGOs.

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