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Story‑time, POV, confessions, and “you won’t believe this” content dominate TikTok because they keep people watching. This guide breaks down how to structure stories that actually hold attention.
Don’t start with backstory. Start where the tension is highest: “I was sitting in HR when they pulled out the screenshots.” You can fill in context after the hook lands.
Write how you talk. Short sentences, direct phrasing, no over‑explaining. TikTok is fast—if it sounds like an essay, people swipe.
Every few seconds, add a new detail that raises the stakes: a lie, a secret, a consequence, a twist. Viewers should constantly feel like they need “one more second.”
Use POV framing (“you”) or relatable situations so people see themselves in the story. “Imagine your boss did this to you…” hits harder than “My boss did this.”
If you promise something wild in the first 3 seconds, deliver it. Nothing kills retention like a clickbait hook with a boring payoff.
Instead of staring at a blank screen, use HookGen to generate full story scripts in different tones—dark, emotional, POV, confession, and more.