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chatgpt image 27. феб 2026. 09 15 38

A Hook Isn’t Meant to Attract Everyone
It’s Meant to Keep the Right Ones

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Most people want a hook that “grabs attention.”

But attention alone means nothing.

A video can have views.
It can have strong retention.
It can have likes.
And still not generate sales.

Why?

Because a hook isn’t meant to attract everyone.
It’s meant to filter.
If you speak to everyone — you speak to no one.

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A Generic Hook Is the Most Expensive Hook
Look at these examples:

❌ “3 tips for better marketing.”
❌ “How to improve your business.”
❌ “The biggest mistake in sales.”
They sound fine.

But who exactly is this for?

Beginners?
Experienced entrepreneurs?
Freelancers?
Course creators?
When the message is broad, the audience becomes mixed.
And mixed audiences rarely convert.
Now compare that with:

✔️ “If you sell an online course and your revenue fluctuates month to month — this is why.”
✔️ “Stop creating content that gets likes but not buyers.”
✔️ “If you’re working more than ever but your income is stuck — here’s the problem.”

Suddenly, it’s clear who should stay.

And who can scroll.

That’s the difference between views and sales.

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Mini Case Study: One Sentence. Big Difference.
We were running a campaign with solid numbers:

– Good retention
– Decent CTR
– But low conversion
The hook was:

“The biggest mistake in online sales.”

Not terrible.
But too broad.

We changed only the first sentence to:

“If you sell an online service and clients message you but don’t close — you’re making this mistake.”

Nothing else changed.

Same budget.
Same audience.
Same video.

The result?

Higher-quality leads.
More serious inquiries.
A significant lift in conversions.

Why?

Because we stopped speaking to everyone.
We started speaking to the right people.
A hook isn’t just a catchy sentence.
It’s positioning.

The Most Dangerous Type of Hook
It’s not the boring one.

It’s the one that sounds “solid.”

The one that gets views but not buyers.

These hooks create curiosity — but not clarity.

And without clarity, there’s no decision.
The brain must instantly recognize:
“This is for me.”

If it has to think too long — it leaves.

Contrast, Provocation, and Filtering
The strongest hooks often include one of these elements:

1. Contrast
“You’re working too much for too little result.”

2. Provocation
“Your strategy isn’t the problem. Your consistency is.”

3. Clear filtering
“This is for online business owners who want stable sales — not random spikes.”

They’re not trying to be liked.

They’re trying to be precise.
And that’s why they convert.
Your Hook Determines the Quality of Your Audience
If your hook attracts the wrong people,
the rest of your ad has to work twice as hard.

If your hook attracts the right people,
the rest of the ad simply confirms their decision.

That’s the difference between:

“I have a lot of views.”
and
“I have consistent sales.”

Inside the course, we go deep into:

– How to write hooks that filter
– How to recognize when they’re too broad
– How to narrow them without losing power
– How to measure quality, not just quantity

Because the goal isn’t to be watched by everyone.

The goal is to keep the right buyers.
And now I want to involve you.
On Friday, I’ll announce a giveaway.

The challenge will be simple:
Write the best hook for your offer.

Three of the best hooks will win FREE access to the course.

Yes — three winners.

The draw will happen over the weekend.

If you believe you can write a sentence that filters and sells —
Friday is your day.

Your next level might start with just one line.

Ana
CM Academy

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