#076 - The Problem with Clickbait Hooks on LinkedIn
This is a hook.
It got you to read the next line, didn’t it?
A good hook grabs attention and holds it.
Some do the opposite: they bait, then disappoint.
Clickbait doesn’t build interest. It builds suspicion.
It sparks curiosity only to burn trust.
And on LinkedIn, trust is everything.
We’re not chasing empty clicks, we’re earning credibility.
Clickbait hooks leave readers feeling misled, or worse, manipulated.
That’s not the kind of attention worth having.

Here’s how to craft a hook with context over clickbait:
1. Hook = Strainer
Not everyone needs to read your post.
But not a single target reader should miss it.
Want to stop the right person mid-scroll? Try this:
• Address their pain point. They feel seen.
“Struggling to write hooks that get attention?”
• Mention them or their industry. They instantly tune in.
“Content creators, this one’s for you.”
• Reference a relatable moment. They remember you.
“Ever spent hours writing a post, only for no one to engage?”
• Tie it to an outcome they care about. They come back for more.
“This hook formula can double your engagement in 24 hours.”

This turns your hook into a strainer. It filters out the noise and reaches only the right people.
2. Challenge Popular Opinions
• Frame hooks that sound too good to be true but deliver.
• Contradict common beliefs without stirring unnecessary controversy.
• Make bold promises, then back them with logic or lived experience.

This type of curiosity builds interest and rewards readers with the insight they came for.
3. Create FOMO
No one likes being left out of trends, hacks, or insights.
Use momentum with phrases like:
• “Everyone is switching to…”
• “We tested this with 30 clients. Here’s what happened.”
• “If you’re not doing this in [X], you’re behind.”

Make your audience wonder,
“Am I the only one not doing this?”
Let FOMO pull them in. Let your content make them stay.
4. Get Serious with a Stat or Fact
• Numbers make your hook credible.
• A clear stat signals expertise and shows your content has weight.
• It tells your reader this is worth their time.

Just make sure the stat is real, something you’ve tested, observed, or found genuinely insightful.
5. The Ending Hook
A strong hook should come full circle.
Connect it to your main message, then bring it back in your conclusion.

When the start and finish align, your content leaves a stronger impression.
Bonus Hook
When your hook, content, and consistency align, you start earning trust.
Once that trust is built, people will read your content simply because your name is on it.
Clickbait gets attention, but it doesn’t build loyalty. Show up consistently until your name is what makes people stop scrolling.
TLDR Recap
When writing hooks:
→ Speak to your audience, not the entire feed
→ Challenge norms when it adds value
→ Use FOMO, but follow through with insight
→ Stats build credibility only when they are true
→ Start strong and close with alignment
→ Build trust until your name becomes the hook