# Title Formulas Reference 8 hook formulas + straightforward style for balanced title generation. ## Hook Formulas | # | Formula | Characteristics | Example | |---|---------|----------------|---------| | 1 | Subversive | Deny common belief, create cognitive conflict | "All de-AI-flavor prompts are wrong" | | 2 | Solution | Give the answer directly, promise concrete value | "One recipe to make AI write in your voice" | | 3 | Suspense | Reveal half, spark a curiosity gap | "It took me six months to find how to remove AI flavor" | | 4 | Concrete Number | Use specific numbers for credibility and impact | "150 lines of docs taught AI my writing style" | | 5 | Contrast | Small cause → big result, or expectation vs reality | "One doc replaced three months of AI tuning" | | 6 | Result First | Lead with a surprising outcome, hook reader to find out why | "After using this method, nobody could tell it was AI" | | 7 | Rhetorical Question | Ask a question that creates an unfinished feeling | "Why can people spot your AI writing at a glance?" | | 8 | Empathy | Touch pain points, trigger shared frustration or relief | "Three months fighting AI flavor — I finally broke free" | ### When to pick each formula | Formula | Best for | |---------|----------| | Subversive | Articles that challenge mainstream advice or debunk myths | | Solution | How-to guides, tutorials, actionable advice pieces | | Suspense | Personal stories, case studies, journey narratives | | Concrete Number | Data-driven articles, benchmarks, step-by-step guides | | Contrast | Before/after stories, unexpected discoveries, comparisons | | Result First | Success stories, transformation pieces, "I tried X" articles | | Rhetorical Question | Problem-awareness pieces, diagnostic/explainer content | | Empathy | Struggle narratives, community pain points, relatable experiences | ## Straightforward Style Not every title needs a hook. Straightforward titles work well as alternatives: - **Descriptive**: clearly state the topic and scope - **Declarative**: state the main conclusion or thesis directly These provide balance — readers who prefer clarity over curiosity will appreciate them. ## Title Principles - **Hook in first 5 characters**: create information gap or cognitive conflict - **Specific > abstract**: "150 lines" beats "a document" - **Negation > affirmation**: "you're doing it wrong" beats "the right way" - **Conversational**: like chatting with a friend, not an academic paper - **Max ~30 characters**: longer titles get truncated in feeds - **Accurate, not clickbait**: the article must deliver what the title promises — titles can be bold but the content must back them up ## Prohibited Patterns - Vague academic-style: "On XX", "Thoughts on XX", "Exploration and Practice of XX" - Pure shock bait: "Shocking!", "10,000-word essay", "Must bookmark" - Directionless questions: "Where is the future of AI writing?"