--- name: headline-formulas description: "25+ proven headline formulas that stop the scroll, capture attention, and drive clicks. Templates and examples for every situation. Use when: Writing headlines for landing pages, ads, or articles; Creating email subject lines that get opens; Crafting social media hooks; A/B testing headline variations; Overcoming headline writer's block" license: MIT metadata: author: ClawFu version: 1.0.0 mcp-server: "@clawfu/mcp-skills" --- # Headline Formulas > 25+ proven headline formulas that stop the scroll, capture attention, and drive clicks. Templates and examples for every situation. ## When to Use This Skill - Writing headlines for landing pages, ads, or articles - Creating email subject lines that get opens - Crafting social media hooks - A/B testing headline variations - Overcoming headline writer's block - Training teams on headline best practices ## Methodology Foundation **Source**: Compiled from David Ogilvy, John Caples, Gary Halbert, Joanna Wiebe, and decades of tested direct response advertising. **Core Principle**: "On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy." (Ogilvy) Your headline is 80% of your ad's success. **Why This Matters**: A great product with a weak headline fails. A decent product with a magnetic headline succeeds. Headlines are the highest-leverage words you'll write. --- ## What Claude Does vs What You Decide > "Claude generates options. You choose winners." | Claude handles | You provide | |---------------|-------------| | Generating 10-20 headline variations rapidly | The core benefit/offer to highlight | | Applying proven formulas systematically | Audience knowledge and pain points | | Mixing formula types for variety | Brand voice and tone constraints | | Scoring headlines against criteria | Final selection based on intuition + data | | Creating A/B test candidate sets | Testing decisions and winner analysis | **Remember**: Headlines are iterative. Claude accelerates generation; you apply taste and test results. --- ## What This Skill Does 1. **Generates headlines by formula** - Plug-and-play templates 2. **Matches formula to goal** - Curiosity, benefit, news, etc. 3. **Creates headline variations** - A/B test candidates 4. **Evaluates headline strength** - Scores against proven criteria 5. **Adapts headlines to format** - Landing page, email, social, ad ## How to Use ### Generate Headlines ``` Give me 10 headlines for: Product: [description] Key benefit: [main value] Format: [landing page/email/ad/social] ``` ### Use a Specific Formula ``` Write 5 headlines using the [How-To / Number / Question / etc.] formula for: [product/offer description] ``` ### Evaluate Headlines ``` Score these headlines against best practices and rank them: 1. [headline] 2. [headline] 3. [headline] ``` ### Headline Variations ``` Create 10 variations of this headline for A/B testing: [original headline] ``` ## Instructions When creating headlines, apply these proven formulas: ### Category 1: How-To Headlines ``` ## HOW-TO FORMULAS The "how-to" headline promises practical instruction. Works when audience wants to learn. ### Formula 1: Basic How-To "How to [achieve desired outcome]" Examples: - "How to Win Friends and Influence People" - "How to Write Copy That Sells" - "How to Double Your Conversion Rate in 30 Days" ### Formula 2: How-To for Specific Audience "How to [achieve outcome] (Even If [obstacle])" Examples: - "How to Build a 6-Figure Business (Even If You Have No Audience)" - "How to Run a Marathon (Even If You've Never Run a Mile)" - "How to Write a Book (Even If You Failed English)" ### Formula 3: How-To with Timeframe "How to [achieve outcome] in [specific time]" Examples: - "How to Learn Spanish in 90 Days" - "How to Build Your Email List in 30 Days" - "How to Get Your First 1,000 Customers in 6 Months" ### Formula 4: How I Did It "How I [achieved specific result]" Examples: - "How I Built a $10M Business from My Bedroom" - "How I Lost 50 Pounds Without Giving Up Pizza" - "How I Got 1 Million YouTube Subscribers in 18 Months" ``` --- ### Category 2: Number/List Headlines ``` ## NUMBER HEADLINES Specific numbers create curiosity and implied ease. Odd numbers often outperform even. ### Formula 5: The Basic List "[Number] Ways to [achieve outcome]" Examples: - "7 Ways to Increase Your Email Open Rate" - "21 Productivity Hacks for Remote Workers" - "101 Blog Post Ideas for Any Niche" ### Formula 6: Things You Didn't Know "[Number] [Topic] Secrets [Audience] Doesn't Know" Examples: - "7 Copywriting Secrets Most Marketers Never Learn" - "5 Tax Deductions Your Accountant Forgot to Tell You" - "9 Things Your Competition Doesn't Want You to Know" ### Formula 7: Mistakes/Errors "[Number] [Topic] Mistakes That Are Costing You [Loss]" Examples: - "5 Landing Page Mistakes Costing You Conversions" - "7 Resume Errors That Get You Rejected" - "3 Diet Mistakes That Make You Gain Weight" ### Formula 8: Reasons Why "[Number] Reasons Why [unexpected claim]" Examples: - "11 Reasons Why You're Not Getting Traffic" - "5 Reasons Why Your Ads Aren't Converting" - "7 Reasons Why Smart People Stay Poor" ### Formula 9: Specific Result Number "Get [specific number] [result] with [method]" Examples: - "Get 10,000 Email Subscribers with One Landing Page" - "Generate $5,000/Month with This Simple System" - "Lose 15 Pounds in 6 Weeks Without Exercise" ``` --- ### Category 3: Question Headlines ``` ## QUESTION HEADLINES Questions engage the brain automatically. The reader mentally answers—and keeps reading. ### Formula 10: Do You Make This Mistake? "Do You Make These [Topic] Mistakes?" Examples: - "Do You Make These Mistakes in English?" (famous John Caples headline) - "Do You Make These LinkedIn Mistakes?" - "Do You Make These Common SEO Errors?" ### Formula 11: Are You...? "Are You [characteristic of target audience]?" Examples: - "Are You Too Busy to Be Rich?" - "Are You Tired of Diets That Don't Work?" - "Are You Losing Money While You Sleep?" ### Formula 12: What Would You...? "What Would You Do With [desirable thing]?" Examples: - "What Would You Do With an Extra $1,000 a Month?" - "What Would You Do With 10 Extra Hours a Week?" - "What Would You Do If You Could Start Over?" ### Formula 13: Who Else Wants...? "Who Else Wants [desirable outcome]?" Examples: - "Who Else Wants to Write a Bestselling Book?" - "Who Else Wants to Build a 6-Figure Side Hustle?" - "Who Else Wants Gorgeous Skin at 50?" ### Formula 14: What Happens When...? "What Happens When [intriguing scenario]?" Examples: - "What Happens When an AI Writes Your Emails?" - "What Happens When You Ignore Your Customer's Complaints?" - "What Happens When You Stop Chasing Clients?" ``` --- ### Category 4: News/Announcement Headlines ``` ## NEWS HEADLINES News headlines leverage our wired attraction to novelty. Works best for launches, updates, discoveries. ### Formula 15: Announcing/Introducing "Announcing: [New thing and its benefit]" "Introducing: [New solution to old problem]" Examples: - "Announcing: The First AI That Writes Like You" - "Introducing: The Fastest Way to Build a Website" - "Finally: A CRM That Works the Way You Do" ### Formula 16: Now You Can "Now You Can [previously impossible/difficult thing]" Examples: - "Now You Can Build an App Without Coding" - "Now You Can Get Custom Suits Without the Tailor" - "Now You Can Invest Like a Hedge Fund" ### Formula 17: Discover "Discover [surprising benefit or method]" Examples: - "Discover the Morning Routine of Top CEOs" - "Discover Why 80% of Diets Fail (And What Actually Works)" - "Discover the One Change That Tripled Our Revenue" ### Formula 18: New/Revolutionary/Breakthrough "New [category] [does remarkable thing]" (Use sparingly—overused and often feels hypey) Examples: - "New Software Writes Emails in Your Voice" - "New Study Reveals the Real Cause of Burnout" - "Breakthrough Technology Cuts Shipping Costs 50%" ``` --- ### Category 5: Benefit-First Headlines ``` ## BENEFIT HEADLINES Lead with what they GET. The most direct approach. ### Formula 19: Get [Benefit] "Get [Specific Desirable Result]" Examples: - "Get More Traffic With Less Content" - "Get Abs Without Sit-Ups" - "Get Booked Solid Without Cold Calling" ### Formula 20: The Only/Ultimate "The Only [Category] That [Unique Benefit]" "The Ultimate Guide to [Topic]" Examples: - "The Only Landing Page Builder With Built-In A/B Testing" - "The Only Email Tool Made for Creators" - "The Ultimate Guide to Facebook Ads in 2024" ### Formula 21: Transformation Statement "Go From [Current State] to [Desired State]" Examples: - "Go From Freelancer to Agency Owner in 90 Days" - "Go From Overwhelmed to Organized in One Week" - "Go From Zero Followers to Verified in 6 Months" ### Formula 22: Without "[Achieve Result] Without [Common Pain Point]" Examples: - "Lose Weight Without Counting Calories" - "Build Muscle Without Living at the Gym" - "Get Clients Without Cold Outreach" ``` --- ### Category 6: Curiosity/Intrigue Headlines ``` ## CURIOSITY HEADLINES Create a gap between what they know and what they want to know. Compels the click. ### Formula 23: The Secret "The Secret to [Desirable Outcome]" "The [Unexpected] Secret to [Outcome]" Examples: - "The Secret to Writing 10X Faster" - "The Weird Secret to Getting Your Kids to Listen" - "The Japanese Secret to Living Past 100" ### Formula 24: What [Experts] Know "What [Authority Figures] Know That You Don't" "What [Industry] Doesn't Want You to Know" Examples: - "What Top Salespeople Know About Closing" - "What Insurance Companies Hope You Never Find Out" - "What Your Doctor Won't Tell You About Sleep" ### Formula 25: The Reason Why "The Real Reason [Surprising Fact]" "Why [Counterintuitive Statement]" Examples: - "The Real Reason Your Content Isn't Working" - "Why Working Harder Makes You Less Successful" - "Why Your Best Clients Came From Your Worst Marketing" ### Formula 26: Strange/Unusual/Weird "The Strange [Method] That [Achieves Result]" Examples: - "The Strange Email That Gets 60% Reply Rates" - "The Weird Diet Trick That Actually Works" - "The Unusual Marketing Strategy Behind a $50M Brand" ``` --- ### Category 7: Social Proof Headlines ``` ## SOCIAL PROOF HEADLINES Leverage what others have achieved. Creates credibility and FOMO. ### Formula 27: Number of People "Join [Number] [People] Who [Achieved Result]" Examples: - "Join 50,000 Marketers Getting Our Weekly Newsletter" - "Join 10,000 Developers Who Shipped Faster" - "Join 25,000 People Who Lost Weight Our Way" ### Formula 28: Stolen/Borrowed Authority "[Celebrity/Brand] [Uses/Recommends/Does] [Thing]" Examples: - "Why Warren Buffett Reads 500 Pages a Day" - "The Productivity System Used by Elon Musk" - "The Framework McKinsey Uses for Strategy" ### Formula 29: Specific Testimonial "[Person] Went From [Before] to [After]" "How [Person] [Achieved Specific Result]" Examples: - "How Sarah Went From Side Hustle to $1M Business" - "How This Teacher Built a YouTube Channel With 500K Subs" - "How Tom Made $47K in 30 Days (Starting From Zero)" ``` --- ### Headline Power Words ``` ## WORDS THAT BOOST HEADLINE PERFORMANCE ### Urgency Words - Now, Today, Immediately, Instant - Limited, Final, Last Chance - Deadline, Expires, Before ### Benefit Words - Free, Save, Easy, Simple - Fast, Quick, Guaranteed - Proven, Tested, Works ### Curiosity Words - Secret, Hidden, Discover - Revealed, Unusual, Strange - Shocking, Surprising, Finally ### Emotion Words - Afraid, Frustrated, Overwhelmed - Excited, Confident, Peaceful - Embarrassing, Devastating, Life-changing ### Specificity Words - Exactly, Precisely, Step-by-step - Complete, Comprehensive - [Specific numbers and percentages] ``` ## Examples ### Example 1: Headline Generation for SaaS **Context**: Landing page for email marketing software **Input**: > Give me 10 headlines for an email marketing tool. Key benefit: higher deliverability. Audience: frustrated marketers. **Output**: 1. **How-To**: "How to Land in the Inbox (Not the Spam Folder)" 2. **Number**: "5 Reasons Your Emails Aren't Getting Delivered—And How to Fix Them" 3. **Question**: "Are Your Emails Even Reaching Your Subscribers?" 4. **News**: "Finally: Email Deliverability You Can Actually Trust" 5. **Benefit**: "Get 99.2% Deliverability Without Changing Your Content" 6. **Curiosity**: "The Inbox Secret That 2,500 Brands Already Know" 7. **Social Proof**: "Join 10,000 Marketers Who Stopped Losing Emails to Spam" 8. **Problem-Agitate**: "Your Emails Are Going to Spam. Here's the Fix." 9. **Specific**: "Go From 73% to 99% Deliverability in 14 Days" 10. **Without**: "Maximum Deliverability Without Deliverability Headaches" **Winner Analysis**: #9 leads with specificity (before/after numbers). #5 leads with a bold, specific claim. Both would make strong A/B test candidates. --- ### Example 2: Subject Line Variations **Context**: Email promoting a webinar **Input**: > Create 10 subject line variations for a webinar about content strategy for B2B SaaS **Output**: | # | Subject Line | Formula Used | |---|--------------|--------------| | 1 | The content strategy mistake every SaaS makes | Mistake | | 2 | How we generated 200 leads from one blog post | How I + Specific | | 3 | [Webinar] Your content isn't working. Here's why. | Problem | | 4 | 3 content plays that actually work for B2B SaaS | Number + Specificity | | 5 | Why your blog isn't generating leads (free webinar) | Why + Offer | | 6 | Steal our B2B content strategy (it took 3 years to build) | Curiosity + Value | | 7 | Join 500 SaaS marketers for this live session | Social Proof | | 8 | Stop creating content. Start this instead. | Counterintuitive | | 9 | The $0 content strategy behind our growth | Curiosity + Specific | | 10 | Your competition's content playbook (revealed) | Curiosity | **A/B Test Recommendation**: Test #3 (direct pain) vs #6 (curiosity + value) vs #4 (number + specificity) --- ### Example 3: Headline Scoring **Context**: Evaluating three headline options **Input**: > Score these headlines: > 1. "Introducing our new software" > 2. "The software 10,000 marketers switched to" > 3. "Get 3X more leads with half the effort" **Output**: | Criterion | #1 | #2 | #3 | |-----------|----|----|-----| | Specific benefit | 1 | 2 | 5 | | Curiosity/Interest | 1 | 3 | 4 | | Target audience clear | 1 | 4 | 4 | | Self-interest appeal | 1 | 3 | 5 | | Avoids vagueness | 1 | 3 | 4 | | Memorability | 1 | 3 | 4 | | **TOTAL** | **6/30** | **18/30** | **26/30** | **Verdict**: - #1: Too vague, no benefit, could be anything - #2: Decent social proof, but lacks specific outcome - #3: Winner—specific, benefit-driven, measurable claim **Improved version of #1**: "Introducing: The First Email Tool Built for Conversion (Not Just Sends)" ## Checklists & Templates ### Headline Evaluation Checklist ``` ## Before Publishing, Check: ### Clarity - [ ] Can someone understand it without context? - [ ] Is the benefit obvious? - [ ] Is the audience clear? ### Specificity - [ ] Are there specific numbers? - [ ] Is it concrete (not abstract)? - [ ] Could only YOUR product use this headline? ### Emotion - [ ] Does it trigger curiosity, desire, or urgency? - [ ] Does it speak to a real pain or aspiration? - [ ] Would someone want to click to learn more? ### Credibility - [ ] Is the claim believable? - [ ] Can you prove it? - [ ] Does it avoid hype words? ### Format - [ ] Is it the right length for the platform? - [ ] Does it work on mobile? - [ ] Is key info at the start (in case of truncation)? ``` --- ### Formula Quick Reference ``` ## Copy-Paste Formula Bank HOW-TO: □ How to [achieve outcome] in [timeframe] □ How to [achieve outcome] without [common pain] □ How I [achieved specific result] NUMBER: □ [#] Ways to [achieve outcome] □ [#] [Topic] Mistakes Costing You [Loss] □ [#] Reasons Why [surprising claim] QUESTION: □ Do You Make These [Topic] Mistakes? □ Are You [characteristic of target]? □ Who Else Wants [desirable outcome]? BENEFIT: □ Get [Specific Result] Without [Pain] □ The Only [Category] That [Unique Benefit] □ Go From [Current] to [Desired] in [Time] CURIOSITY: □ The Secret to [Outcome] □ Why [Counterintuitive Statement] □ What [Experts] Know That You Don't SOCIAL PROOF: □ Join [#] [People] Who [Achieved Result] □ How [Person] [Achieved Specific Result] ``` --- ### Headline Swipe File Template ``` ## Headline Swipe File Collect winners here for future inspiration: ### [Category: e.g., Email Subject Lines] | Headline | Source | Why It Works | |----------|--------|--------------| | [Headline] | [Where found] | [Notes] | ### [Category: e.g., Landing Pages] | Headline | Source | Why It Works | |----------|--------|--------------| | [Headline] | [Where found] | [Notes] | ``` ## Skill Boundaries (Frontier Recognition) ### This skill excels for: - Landing page headlines where one line determines conversion - Email subject lines needing variety for A/B testing - Ad copy generation (Facebook, Google, LinkedIn) - Content headlines for articles and blog posts - Social media hooks that stop the scroll ### This skill is NOT ideal for: - **Brand taglines** (longer-term, needs brand strategy context) → Use brand-strategy skill first - **Technical documentation** headlines → These follow different conventions - **Headlines requiring specific legal language** → Requires human/legal review - **Very niche B2B** where formulas feel too "marketingy" → Adapt tone or use softer formulas ### Quality Checkpoints Before publishing, verify: - [ ] Headline is specific to YOUR product (couldn't be used by competitor) - [ ] Key benefit appears in first 6 words (for mobile/truncation) - [ ] No unsubstantiated claims you can't prove - [ ] Matches the actual content/offer (no bait-and-switch) - [ ] Sounds like something a human would say --- ## Iteration Guide > "The first batch is raw material. Polish through iteration." ### Recommended Iteration Pattern | Pass | Focus | Questions to Ask | |------|-------|------------------| | **1st** | Volume | "Give me 15 headlines using different formulas" | | **2nd** | Selection | "Which 5 have strongest hooks? Why?" | | **3rd** | Refinement | "Make these more specific to [audience detail]" | | **4th** | Testing | "Create 3 variations of the winner for A/B" | ### Useful Follow-up Prompts After the first batch, try: - "These feel generic. Add [specific product benefit or stat]" - "Too salesy. Make them more conversational/editorial" - "The audience is [sophisticated/skeptical]. Tone down the hype" - "Create 5 more using ONLY the Question formula" - "Shorten these to under 8 words for mobile" --- ## Learning Curve | Usage | What You'll Experience | |-------|----------------------| | **1st use** | Discover the formula categories, get 15+ options fast | | **5th use** | You develop favorites, request specific formula types | | **20th use** | You internalize formulas, use Claude mainly for speed/variety | **Pro tip**: Keep a swipe file of headlines that worked. Feed Claude your best performers as examples for even better results. --- ## References - Ogilvy, David. "Ogilvy on Advertising" (1983) - Caples, John. "Tested Advertising Methods" (1932) - Halbert, Gary. "The Boron Letters" (1984) - Wiebe, Joanna. Copyhackers headline research - CoSchedule Headline Analyzer methodology - Upworthy headline testing (curiosity gap research) ## Related Skills - [copywriting-ogilvy](../copywriting-ogilvy/) - Ogilvy's headline principles in depth - [copy-frameworks](../copy-frameworks/) - Structure the rest of your copy - [email-writing](../email-writing/) - Subject lines in context - [cta-writing](../cta-writing/) - What comes after the headline --- ## Skill Metadata - **Mode**: cyborg ```yaml name: headline-formulas category: content subcategory: copywriting version: 2.0 author: GUIA source_expert: Multiple (Ogilvy, Caples, Halbert, Wiebe) source_work: Compilation of proven headline patterns difficulty: beginner mode: cyborg # Cyborg = rapid iteration, creative exploration, tight feedback loop estimated_value: $500 headline workshop tags: [headlines, copywriting, formulas, templates, subject-lines, A/B-testing] created: 2025-01-24 updated: 2026-01-28 ``` --- *This skill is part of the GUIA Premium Marketing Skills Library — the 201 layer that bridges AI basics and technical implementation.*